Espionage as a literary theme is interdisciplinary in nature, as psychoanalysis, philosophy, and political theory converge to categorize this subject and identify his new home in the literary medium. Joseph Conrad's Secret Agent demonstrates how terror, allegory and irony as literary tropes come to be the place the spy inhabits. Terrorism has engendered political, ethical, and scientific controversy over its use. The proliferation of recent films, television programs, and books is a socio-cultural indicator of widespread interest. Designed for a diverse audience including law enforcement officers, intelligence and security officers, attorneys, and researchers Foundations of Psychological Profiling.
Terrorism, Espionage, and Deception
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They could consider spies to be liars, traitors, thieves or even worse. Few people have any real understanding of what the world of spying is like. Moreover nowadays spying has become rather politicized. Peoples´ views are namely shaped by the media and films stereotypes about spying and they give sometimes an inaccurate picture of how espionage is done. The public is usually expected from knowing about specific operations or sensitive sources and methods. Spies are collecting the intelligence critical data to protecting the country. The job they are doing is difficult and dangerous, but somehow important. They are always to prepare themselves against enemies. A prepared country is then seldom attacked. Spies are then one of the greatest forces for world …show more content…
Adopting a thematic approach to the analysis of space in spy fiction, the text explores the reciprocal process by which contextual history intersects with literature throughout the period in question, arguing that spy fiction is responsible for reflecting, strengthening and, in some cases, precipitating cultural anxieties over decolonization and the end of Empire. In light of Mccracken's analysis: "it seems logical for a genre like spy fiction, dramatizing as it did the contemporary ideological battle for Europe and the rest of the world, as well as the decline of the British Empire, to have become so popular". (British spy fiction and the end of