Worst Cases, Lee Clarke
Worst Cases, Lee Clarke
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Worst Cases
Terror and Catastrophe in the Popular Imagination

Author: Lee Clarke

Narrator: Auto-narrated

Unabridged: 8 hr 17 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 05/01/2023


Synopsis

Al Qaeda detonates a nuclear weapon in Times Square during rush hour, wiping out half of Manhattan and killing 500,000 people. A virulent strain of bird flu jumps to humans in Thailand, sweeps across Asia, and claims more than fifty million lives. A single freight car of chlorine derails on the outskirts of Los Angeles, spilling its contents and killing seven million. An asteroid ten kilometers wide slams into the Atlantic Ocean, unleashing a tsunami that renders life on the planet as we know it extinct.
We consider the few who live in fear of such scenarios to be alarmist or even paranoid. But Worst Cases shows that such individuals—like Cassandra foreseeing the fall of Troy—are more reasonable and prescient than you might think. In this book, Lee Clarke surveys the full range of possible catastrophes that animate and dominate the popular imagination, from toxic spills and terrorism to plane crashes and pandemics. Along the way, he explores how the ubiquity of worst cases in everyday life has rendered them ordinary and mundane. Fear and dread, Clarke argues, have actually become too rare: only when the public has more substantial information and more credible warnings will it take worst cases as seriously as it should.
A timely and necessary look into how we think about the unthinkable, Worst Cases will be must reading for anyone attuned to our current climate of threat and fear.

Reviews

Goodreads review by Steven on December 31, 2018

In most respects, this is an excellent book -- it's just densely written for lay readers, which is my only criticism. As Lee Clarke writes in the Preface, although this is a book full of disaster stories (and it definitely is), is really is a book about imagination. Specifically, people plan for the......more

Goodreads review by Shameem on October 23, 2024

I was intrigued by the ideas I expected to be discussed in this book. I think the concept presented had the potential to be much more than it ended up being if the author had adjusted his framework and the lens in which he was approaching the topic. The book could have benefitted from a broader range......more

Goodreads review by Katie on February 11, 2025

This was the first monthly free ebook I downloaded from University of Chicago Press and it wasn't great. It was easier to read than I expected (yay!) but neither very rigorous or well-argued. I didn't think the author made many interesting points about how people perceive disaster. This was basicall......more