Simon Willmetts
Associate professor
- Name
- Dr. S.D. Willmetts
- Telephone
- +31 70 800 9500
- s.d.willmetts@fgga.leidenuniv.nl
- ORCID iD
- 0000-0002-7047-6034
Simon Willmetts is Associate Professor of Intelligence Studies at the Institute of Security and Global Affairs. He is a cultural historian interested in the history of secrecy, intelligence, surveillance and digital privacy. His research focusses upon the wider social and cultural impact of secret intelligence services and their activities. His first book, In Secrecy’s Shadow: The OSS and CIA in Hollywood Cinema (2016), examines the collapse of public trust in government in the aftermath of the Second World War through the lens of post-war spy cinema. More recently, he has become interested in the way in which contemporary dystopian fiction has interpreted and shaped debates about digital privacy. Extension number: 7670.
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Simon Willmetts is Associate Professor of Intelligence Studies at the Institute of Security and Global Affairs. He is a cultural historian interested in the history of secrecy, intelligence, surveillance and digital privacy. His research focusses upon the wider social and cultural impact of secret intelligence services and their activities. His first book, In Secrecy’s Shadow: The OSS and CIA in Hollywood Cinema (2016), examines the collapse of public trust in government in the aftermath of the Second World War through the lens of post-war spy cinema. More recently, he has become interested in the way in which contemporary dystopian fiction has interpreted and shaped debates about digital privacy.
Simon Willmetts began researching the cultural history of secrecy and the US intelligence services as a member of the UK Arts and Humanities Research Council (AHRC) project entitled The Landscapes of Secrecy: The CIA and the Contested Record of US Foreign Policy, 1947-2001. The project explored how the US Central Intelligence Agency emerged in popular discourses as a lightning rod for wider public anxieties regarding secrecy and the excesses of US foreign policy. His book, In Secrecy’s Shadow: The OSS and CIA in Hollywood Cinema, 1941-1979, was the key output from this project, and argued that the expansion of official secrecy led to a dramatic cultural shift in the United States from credulity and faith in government institutions, to scepticism and conspiracy theory.
After completing his PhD at the University of Warwick he moved to the University of Hull in the UK, where he rose to the position of Senior Lecturer in the American Studies department and published a number of articles on the history of CIA public relations and spy fiction. He also worked on a major UK Economics and Social Sciences Research Council (ESRC) project entitled The Common Good: The Ethics and Rights of Cyber Security. This project explored the debates around surveillance and privacy in the wake of the Edward Snowden revelations. As a result of this project he became interested in narratives of surveillance, particularly the representation of digital surveillance and privacy in contemporary dystopian fiction.
In the summer of 2018 he published an article in the prestigious American Quarterly journal that collected many of his thoughts that emerged from this project. He joined the University of Leiden’s Institute of Security and Global Affairs (ISGA) in September 2018, and he works with the Intelligence Research Group on a number of projects. He also teaches on the BA minor in intelligence studies, and contributes to various other ISGA programmes.
Associate professor
- Faculty Governance and Global Affairs
- Institute of Security and Global Affairs
- Intelligence
- Willmetts S. (2024), Forbidden history: CIA censorship, the invisible government, and the origins of the “deep state” conspiracy theory, Intelligence and National Security 39(2): 281-297.
- Willmetts S. (2023), The many realisms of John Le Carré, Intelligence and National Security 38(2): 204-217.
- Constant Hijzen and Simon Willmetts (2022), Institutional and Organizational Crisis: The CIA After 9/11. In: Sanneke Kuipers Allan McConnell et al. (Ed.), The Oxford Encyclopedia of Crisis Analysis. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
- Simon Willmetts (2022), Culture in Intelligence Studies. In: Huw Dylan Michael Goodman Robert Dover (Ed.), A Research Agenda for Intelligence Studies and Government: Edward Elgar Press.
- Willmetts S. (2019), The cultural turn in intelligence studies, Intelligence and National Security 34(6): 800-817.
- Willmetts S.D. (2018), Digital Dystopia: Surveillance, Autonomy, and Social Justice in Gary Shteyngart’s Super Sad True Love Story, American Quarterly 70(2): 267-289.
- Willmetts S.D. (3 February 2017), What are the Orwellian Dystopias of the 21st Century?. [web article].
- Willmetts S.D. (6 February 2016), “I Am Skeptical That Capitalism Has a Future”: An Interview with Cory Doctorow. [web article].
- Willmetts S.D. (29 January 2016), When the Internet Got Nasty: Art on the Electronic Superhighway. [web article].
- Willmetts S.D. (2016), In Secrecy's Shadow: The OSS and CIA in Hollywood Cinema, 1941-1979. Edinburgh, UK: Edinburgh University Press.
- Willmetts S.D. (26 October 2015), Homeland, Snowden and Fictional Defences of the CIA. [web article].
- Willmetts S.D. (1 September 2015), Why Burning Man is Silicon Valley. [web article].
- Willmetts S.D. (2015), The Burgeoning Fissures of Dissent: Allen Dulles and the Selling of the CIA in the Aftermath of the Bay of Pigs, History 100(340): 167-188.
- Willmetts S.D. (2015), The CIA and the Invention of Tradition, Journal of Intelligence History 14(2): 112-128.
- Willmetts S.D. (2015) Review of 'Imagining Surveillance: Eutopian and Dystopian Literature and Film'. Review of: Marks P. (2015), Imagining Surveillance: Eutopian and Dystopian Literature and Film: Edinburgh University Press. International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media 11(2): 237-239.
- Willmetts S.D. (18 November 2013), Secrecy at the Heart of Kennedy Conspiracy Fears. The Yorkshire Post.
- Willmetts S.D. (2013), Quiet Americans: The CIA in Early Cold War Culture, Journal of American Studies 47(1): .
- Willmetts S.D. & Moran C. (2013), Filming Treachery: British Cinema and Television's Fascination with the Cambridge Five, Journal of British Cinema and Television 49(70): 239-252.
- Willmetts S.D. (2013), Fact vs. Fiction: A False Dichotomy?. In: Moran C. & Murphy C.J. (Eds.), Intelligence Studies in Britain and the US Historiography since 1945: Edinburgh University Press. 146-171.
- Willmetts S.D. (2013), Central Intelligence Agency. In: Lynch T.J. (Ed.), The Oxford Encyclopaedia of American Military and Diplomatic History: Oxford University Press. 144-151.
- Willmetts S.D. (2011), Secrecy, Censorship and Beltway Books: Understanding the Work of the CIA's Publications Review Board, Intelligence and Counterintelligence : .