While many of the essays in this book were written before 9/11, they
point to a number of important issues such as the commercialization of
public life, the stepped up militarization, racial profiling, and the
threat to basic civil liberties that have been resurrected since the
terrorist attacks. Public Spaces, Private Lives serves to legitimate the
claim that there is much in America that has not changed since 9/11.
Rather than a dramatic change, what we are witnessing is an
intensification and acceleration of the contradictions that threatened
American democracy before the tragic events of 9/11. Hence, Public
Spaces, Private Lives offers a context for both understanding and
critically engaging the combined threats posed by the increase in
domestic militarization and a neoliberal ideology that substitutes
market values for those democratic values that are crucial to rethinking
what a vibrant democracy would look like in the aftermath of September
11th.