UFO crash at rowell
Editorial IDEA BOOKS, S.A.
Mainland Spain
- Publisher IDEA BOOKS, S.A.
- ISBN13 9781560987512
- ISBN10 1560987510
- Type Book
- Pages 198
- Published 1996
- Bookbinding Cloth
Sections
Anthropology. General ThemesUFO crash at rowell
Editorial IDEA BOOKS, S.A.
Mainland Spain
Book Details
An alleged flying saucer crash in 1947 in the desert near Roswell, New Mexico, and a purported conspiracy by the federal government to conceal the wreckage form the central case in a fifty-year history of UFO sightings in the United States. Since the so-called Roswell Incident first gained widespread attention in the 1980s, various versions of the original story have surfaced, the government has conducted an exhaustive investigation of the incident, and more than one-quarter of American adults have become convinced that aliens have visited Earth. Transcending the believer-versus-skeptic debate, anthropologists Benson Saler and Charles A. Ziegler contend that the Roswell story is best understood as modern myth. Similar to traditional myths in transmission, structure, and motif, the story also taps into modern beliefs in the power of technology and the duplicity of a monolithic government. The authors show how the Roswell story, like a religious myth, asserts in an "unfalsifiable" narrative the existence of superior beings. Saler and Ziegler also describe the ways in which television and tabloid newspapers keep the story alive as folklore even while presenting it as expose. The book also includes the account of scientist Charles B. Moore, who participated in an experiment to launch balloon-borne radar reflectors in the summer of 1947. That these occasionally crashed in the New Mexico desert forms the probable historical core of the myth.