In: World Literature Studies, vol. 17, no. 1
Details:
Pages: 85 - 96
Language: eng
Keywords:
Susan Choi. Campus novel. Post-9/11 fiction. Moral panic. Profiling. Folk devil.
Article type: ŠTÚDIE/ARTICLES
Document type: PDF
About article:
This article analyzes Susan Choi’s A Person of Interest (2008) as a work of post-9/11 campus fiction. Personal grudges, hidden motives, and past secrets take on a new dimension in the atmosphere of suspicion, where even a respectable citizen becomes a suspect. The novel serves as a microcosm of the post-9/11 world, portraying a space where the ordinary transforms into a landscape of fear and distrust. By examining it through moral panic theory, the following analysis demonstrates how surveillance invades personal privacy, stripping individuals of their humanity and reducing them to suspects. The protagonist Lee’s once private, unremarkable
life becomes a spectacle for public scrutiny, with his movements, relationships, and past subjected to relentless investigation.
How to cite:
ISO 690:
Koval, M. 2025. The American university in the aftermath of 9/11 in Susan Choi’s novel A Person of Interest. In World Literature Studies, vol. 17, no.1, pp. 85-96. 1337-9275. DOI: https://doi.org/10.31577/WLS.2025.17.1.7
APA:
Koval, M. (2025). The American university in the aftermath of 9/11 in Susan Choi’s novel A Person of Interest. World Literature Studies, 17(1), 85-96. 1337-9275. DOI: https://doi.org/10.31577/WLS.2025.17.1.7
About edition:
Publisher: Ústav svetovej literatúry SAV, v. v. i.
Published: 31. 3. 2025
Rights:
This work is licensed under CC BY-NC-ND 4.0