44 min listen
Six Days of the Condor: Why James Grady’s Classic is Geopolitically Relevant in 2019
Six Days of the Condor: Why James Grady’s Classic is Geopolitically Relevant in 2019
ratings:
Length:
30 minutes
Released:
Aug 22, 2019
Format:
Podcast episode
Description
When James Grady wrote, "Six Days of the Condor" in 1973, he had no idea his work of spy fiction would see repetition in the real world. But from an international assassination to a complete government-run espionage department, that's what happened. More than 40 years after the book was first published. with a TV series and several sequels to boot behind him, Grady says, his hero is still human. "One thing that has changed completely," he says," is that society is so much more complex and individuals are more...isolated than we were in the 1970's. The digital revolution has made it harder to separate fact from theory from propaganda from downright manipulation, which is the opposite of what people would have said at the dawn of the information age. But also, there are more and different kinds of ...bad actors now than there ever have been... in part due to fragmentation of society." And that makes today's world infinitely more vexing when it comes to security, geopolitics and diplomacy than the bad old days of the Cold War.
Released:
Aug 22, 2019
Format:
Podcast episode
Titles in the series (100)
Terrorism, Civil Rights and Security: In the wake of the San Bernardino, Calif., terrorist attacks, security expert Scott Stewart discusses impacts to the U.S. political system. Also, Chief Intelligence Officer Jon Sather shares his top reading picks for the coming year. by RANE Podcast Series