RT Journal A1 Elgee NJ T1 Faces of the enemy: Reflections of the hostile imagination JF JAMA JO JAMA YR 1987 FD August 7 VO 258 IS 5 SP 705 OP 705 DO 10.1001/jama.1987.03400050147045 UL http://dx.doi.org/10.1001/jama.1987.03400050147045 AB Vivid and jolting, this book is a major new contribution to the literature of the psychology of war and hence to the prevention of the final epidemic. Sam Keen's slide lecture on the Faces of the Enemy is familiar to many members of Physicians for Social Responsibility, who will commend its publication in this lavishly illustrated and carefully documented volume on the psychology of enmity. A PBS documentary based on the book has also aired June 3. Somehow Keen has found 322 illustrations, 117 in color, for this extraordinary collection of propaganda art, political posters, and cartoons, all dealing with perceptions of the enemy. The text has as many new twists of thought concerning how we think about enemies as the pictorial material has twisted images of antagonists. While Keen writes with a disarmingly calm grace, both the pictures and his verbal images arrest us, so that we are forced