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A L I E N S
i n  A M E R I C A
Conspiracy Cultures from Outerspace to Cyberspace
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Copyright © 1998  Library of Congress
by Cornell University  Cataloging-in-Publication Data 
All rights reserved. Dean, Jodi, b. 1962
Except for brief quotations in a  Aliens in America : conspiracy cultures 
review, this book, or parts thereof,  from outerspace to cyberspace /
must not be reproduced in any form  Jodi Dean, 
without permission in writing from  p.  cm.
the publisher. Includes bibliographical references 
For information, address  (p.  ) and index.
Cornell University Press,
Sage House, paper).—isbn 0-8014-8468-5 (pbk.: alk. 
512 East State Street, paper)
Ithaca, New York 14850. 1. Human-alien encounters—Social 
First published 1998 by  aspects—United States.  2. Alien abduc
Cornell University Press  tion—Social aspects—United States.
First printing, Cornell Paperbacks, 1998  L Title.
Printed in the United States of America  BF2050.D43  1998  97-44509
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Contents
Acknowledgments, xi 
Introduction: Alien Politics,  1
1  Fugitive Alien Truth, 25
2  Space Programs, 62
3  Virtually Credible, 98
4  I Want to Believe,  126
5  The Familiarity of Strangeness,  155 
Postscript: Commemorations, July 1997,  182 
Notes,  199
Index, 233
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Acknowledgments
Countless people have watched television, tabloids, and the skies 
for signs of alien life. They have kept me supplied with clippings and car
toons, ever on the alert for something I may have missed. Many people 
have told me their personal stories, some of whom have requested that 
their names not be used. More have given me their opinions on aliens, ab
ductions,  and cover-ups. Thanks to Walt Andrus,  Hubertus  Buchstein, 
Claudette Columbus, Bette Jo Runnels Dean,  Dave Dean,  David  Dean, 
Brenda  Denzler,  Iva  Deutchman,  Leslie  Feldman,  Dawn  Feligno, Joey 
Feligno,  Dahn  Dean  Gandell,  Rachel  Gandell,  Mindy  Gerber,  Robert 
Girard, Judith  Grant,  David  Halperin,  Alan  Hill,  Budd  Hopkins,  Bill 
Hudnut,  Debra Jordan Kauble, Marty Kelly,  Bill  Kenyon, Sue Kenyon, 
John Mack, David Ost, Craig Rimmerman, and Dave Stainton.
E-mail conversations with the members of Alan Hill’s UFO movement 
discussion list kept me up to date, stimulated, and supported as I wrorked on 
this  project.  Faculty  research  grants  from  Hobart  and  William  Smith 
helped to fund fieldwork and supply hard-to-find research materials. Stu
dents and faculty from the colleges were helpful audiences for the early 
presentations that became chapters of this book. Critical feedback from 
participants in the 1996 and 1997 Prague Conferences on Philosophy and 
the Social Sciences challenged me to clarify and sharpen my arguments.
I am fortunate to have had the excellent volunteer research assistance of 
two William Smith students. Kim Crocetta helped me on the astronaut 
chapter,  persistently  contacting  the  NASA  History  Office  and  poring 
through back issues of Life. Ayesha Hassan was the backbone of the abduc
tion research. Her interviewing skills were invaluable at the 1996 Mutual 
UFO Network (MUFON) symposium, and her diligent and creative inter
pretative work proved invaluable.
I give special thanks to people who supported this project in its early 
stages. Without their encouragement, this project would have not been 
possible. Thomas Dumm, whose beautiful writing and provocative work at 
the intersection of political and cultural theory provided a powerful ideal, 
contributed valuable suggestions and advice. Lee Quinby taught me about 
apocalypse, accompanied me to lectures by abduction researchers, and gave 
me crucial advice on every chapter. Elaync Rapping, w hose detailed review
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of the manuscript was unrelenting, pushed me to pay greater attention to 
the significant work done in media studies and talked me through point 
after point. Thanks also to Maura  Burnett and Ken Wissoker for their 
interest in the project and to William Connolly, Bruce Robbins, Thomas 
DiPiero, and Michael Shapiro for their responsive recommendations on 
the proposal, Chapter i, and Chapter 5, respectively.
Alison Shonkwiler has been a wonderful editor. She believed in this proj
ect (if not in the aliens) from the beginning, both taking a book about aliens 
to a press more likely to be associated with Carl Sagan (indeed, Cornell 
published a critical collection on UFOs edited by Sagan in the 1970s) and 
realizing that this was more than a book about aliens. Alison also provided 
meticulous, insightful, and immediate responses throughout the project. 
Often, after reading her suggestions and rereading my original words, I 
wondered what I could have been thinking. No doubt many of the faults 
that remain are the result of my failure to heed all of her advice.
Shane Kenyon wras and continues to be the source and inspiration for my 
thinking on the various networks of the contemporary present (and  for 
much, much more). Kian Runnels Kenyon-Dean, coincidentally (?) bom 
nine months after UFOs were sighted over Albany, New York, reminded 
me of the resemblance between aliens and fetuses, especially after I first 
saw the sonogram of what became Kian. Both prevent my world from be
ing a totally alien place.
A draft of Chapter 5 was previously published in Theory and Event as 
uThe Familiarity of Strangeness: Aliens, Citizens, and Abduction.”
The art used on pages 47, 106, 128, and 159 was provided by Jeff West- 
over, himself an experiencer. He can be contacted by E-mail at jeff.west- 
[email protected].
Geneva, New York  jodi dean
xii  Acknowledgments
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Introduction
Alien Politics
Earth vs. the Flying Saucers
Aliens  have  invaded  the  United  States.  No  longer confined  to 
science fiction and Elvis-obsessed tabloids, aliens appear in the New York 
Times, the Washington Post, and the Wall Street Journal, at candy counters 
(in chocolate-covered  flying saucers and as Martian  melon-flavored lol
lipops), and on Internet web sites. Aliens are at the center of a battle at 
Harvard, caught in the university’s furor over the psychologist John Mack’s 
work with alleged abduction experiences and its attempt to revoke the 
Pulitzer Prize-winning professor’s tenure. Aliens have been seen in cred
ible company at MIT. There, at the  1992  Abduction Study Conference, 
psychiatrists, abductees, ufologists, and professors in sociology, religion, 
and  physics  seriously discussed  the possibility that aliens are  abducting 
people from bedrooms and cars and using their sperm and ova to create a
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Graycie (Gary Tenuta)
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hybrid human-alien species.1  In Nevada, a stretch of interstate near the 
secret military base and alleged crashed-disk hiding place Area 51 was re
named the Extraterrestrial Highway. Attending the dedication ceremony 
were Nevada government officials, the stars, directors, and writers from 
Independence Day, and county, state, and national directors from the Mutual 
UFO Network.2 Walt Disney World added a newr attraction, the Extra- 
TERRORestrial Alien Encounter. Disney invited abductees to Orlando to 
promote it.3
Aliens have been used to market AT&T cellular phones,  Milky Way 
candy bars,  Kodak  film,  Diet Coke,  Stove-Top  Stuffing, T-shirts,  Rice 
Krispies, air fresheners, toys, abduction insurance, skateboard accessories, 
and the backlist at MIT Press. Titled “Subliminal Abduction,” the catalog, 
with its “totally alien prices,” features the typical big-eyed gray alien and 
the alien’s  remarks on various books.  For example, about Thomas Mc
Carthy’s Ideals and Illusions, the alien says “Item  120 explicates earthling 
delusions with grace, wit, and savage sarcasm. A must read!” Fox Network s 
popular show, The X-Files, with its focus on abductions, conspiracies, and 
the search for truth, has generated its ow-n line of products (mugs, hats, 
books, T-shirts, comic books) as wrell as a lively discussion group on Amer
ica OnLine. CompuServe features a closed abductee discussion forum. Ab
ductees Anonymous has a site on the World Wide Web where abductees 
and experiences (those who feel more positive about their alien encoun
ters) recount and interpret important events in their lives. A special section 
is reserved for abductee problems, such as spontaneous involuntary inrisi
bility. Entertainment Tonight says that ETs are one of the most accessed 
subjects on the Net, second only to sex.4 The Penthouse site, promoting the 
September 1996 issue, features both: it displays photos that publisher Bob 
Guccione claims come from the “real autopsy” of the alien wrho crashed in 
Roswell, New Mexico, in 1947 (as opposed to the fake alien autopsy broad
cast by the Fox Network first in 1995 and frequently thereafter). The pho
tos are actually of the model alien body used in the Showtime movie Rosu'ell 
and on display at the town Rosw ell’s International UFO Museum.
Word on the Net is that former Entertainment Tonight host John Tesh is 
an alien. The tabloids claim that twelve U.S. senators are space aliens. Scott 
Mandelker says that 150 million Americans are aliens.5 (At least they have 
political  representation.) A Roper poll suggests that at least one in  fifty 
Americans has been abducted by aliens.6 A Gallup poll says that 2 7 percent 
of Americans believe space aliens have visited Earth.7 The Penthouse site 
raises the number to 48 percent. A Time/CNN poll says 80 percent of its 
respondents believe the U.S. government is covering up its knowledge of
Introduction  3
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Description:In a provocative analysis of public culture and popular concerns, Jodi Dean examines how serious UFO-logists and their pop-culture counterparts tap into fears, phobias, and conspiracy theories with a deep past and a vivid present in American society. Aliens, the author shows, provide cultural icons