Power and Terror: Noam Chomsky in our Times
August 30, 2007
Little Theatre, National Centre for Performing Arts, Mumbai
For decades, the world-renowned intellectual Noam Chomsky has been a quiet but steadfast critic of United States foreign policy. In the aftermath of the terrorist attacks of September 11, his profile took a quantum leap, as he provided much-demanded analysis and historical perspective to concerned citizens throughout the world.
Chomsky, continues his studies in linguistics as an emeritus professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. His linguistic theories have revolutionized the field and won countless academic honours. Since the Vietnam War, he has maintained an active political opposition and published prolific criticism of the exercise and abuse of US power overseas. After September 11, no one has been as pointed and relentless in calling the US to task for its own support and responsibility for countless acts and campaigns of terrorist aggression, both historically and in the present.
Chomsky’s voice may be unpopular-he is totally ignored by the mainstream American press—but his incisive arguments, based on decades of research and analysis, deserve to be heard and considered. “Power and Terror” presents the latest in Noam Chomsky’s thinking, through a lengthy interview and a number of public talks given on the West and East coasts of the US during the spring of 2002.