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Paperback Bigfoot Nation: Cryptids, Creatures, and the Politics of the Unknown Book

ISBN: B0FKZBXPVJ

ISBN13: 9798296194855

Bigfoot Nation: Cryptids, Creatures, and the Politics of the Unknown

What if the monsters aren't hiding in the woods-but in the stories we've buried there? What if the mystery isn't about what Bigfoot is, but why we keep needing him to appear? Bigfoot Nation is a groundbreaking work of cultural history that blends folklore, political theory, Indigenous cosmology, ecological trauma, and epistemic dissent into a sweeping exploration of America's strangest obsession. From Bluff Creek to the Jersey Pine Barrens, from Chupacabra sightings to TikTok cryptid fandoms, this book refuses to ask the tired question-"Is it real?"-and instead asks something far more urgent: What kind of country produces a creature like Bigfoot?

With haunting clarity and depth, cultural historian Johns takes readers on a journey across the landscapes of forgotten histories and unresolved griefs. He begins not with blurry trail-cam photos, but with the beings that came before: Bukwus, Wendigo, Stone Giants, and other forest persons from Indigenous traditions-figures misunderstood, rebranded, or erased by settler narratives. In Johns's telling, these are not myths in need of debunking. They are relational entities-beings that dwell in memory, ceremony, and ecological reciprocity. Their modern counterpart, Bigfoot, emerges not from zoological oddity, but from cosmological rupture: a symptom of dislocation, of imbalance, of land and people fallen out of relation.

Cryptids, Johns argues, are not the margins of culture-they are its messengers. They appear in sacrifice zones, forgotten towns, and bureaucratized wilderness. They mark sites of extraction, collapse, and abandonment. They are folklore's response to political erasure. Whether in the hollers of Appalachia, the canals of Florida, or the Cold War anxieties of 1990s, cryptids do more than haunt-they narrate. They speak where institutions fall silent, giving form to fears too large for science and griefs too localized for policy. They are, as Johns writes, "not mistakes in the system, but reflections of it."

But this is not a book about belief. It is a book about listening. Johns traces the rise of folk science-podcasts, amateur fieldwork, YouTube documentaries-as a populist epistemology rooted in distrust of elite gatekeeping. As government credibility falters and expert consensus fractures, more Americans are turning to experience, to story, to the testimony of those who say, "I know what I saw." In this light, Bigfoot becomes a floating signifier-projected upon by politics, identity, loneliness, and longing. He is the backwoods predator, the gentle forest giant, the neurodivergent ally, the uncatchable ghost of American conscience.

Across its eight parts and forty chapters, Bigfoot Nation refuses to reduce the creature to metaphor or mockery. Instead, it situates him in a rich web of meaning: Cold War psyops, park ranger silence, colonial trauma, ecological collapse, digital nostalgia, and the aching desire for a world that still holds mystery. The cryptid, Johns shows, is not a distraction from serious inquiry-but a call to expand it. To ask not just what is out there, but what has been omitted from our maps, our histories, and our ways of knowing.

This book will challenge skeptics and believers alike. It will resonate with readers of Robin Wall Kimmerer, Silvia Federici, Richard Powers, and David Graeber-those drawn to interdisciplinary works that braid ecology, politics, and myth into new forms of cultural truth. It is not a catalog of sightings. It is an act of attention. It holds space for those who walk into the forest not to conquer it, but to accompany what they cannot name.

If you have ever felt the hairs rise on your neck near the tree line, if you've ever sensed something unprovable watching from the dark, if you've ever suspected that the realest parts of American history were left out of the books-this is the book that meets you in that clearing. Not to explain it. But to remember it with you.

Recommended

Format: Paperback

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