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aDiane Rubenstein is without rival in her brilliant use of
psychoanalytic theory for political science. No one since Michael
Rogin has written so incisively about the American presidency and
American popular culture. This Is Not a President radically
transforms one's understanding of American political
discourse.a--Anne Norton, University of Pennsylvania
In This Is Not a President, Diane Rubenstein looks at the
postmodern presidency -- from Reagan and George H. W. Bush, through
the current administration, and including Hillary. Focusing on
those seemingly inexplicable gaps or blind spots in recent American
presidential politics, Rubenstein interrogates symptomatic moments
in political rhetoric, popular culture, and presidential behavior
to elucidate profound and disturbing changes in the American
presidency and the way it embodies a national imaginary.
In a series of essays written in real time over the past four
presidential administrations, Rubenstein traces the vernacular use
of the American presidency (as currency, as grist for popular
biography, as fictional TV material) to explore the ways in which
the American presidency functions as a atransitional objecta that
allows the American citizen to meet or discover the president while
going about her everyday life. The book argues that it is French
theory -- primarily Lacanian psychoanalysis and the radical
semiotic theories of Jean Baudrillard -- that best accounts for
American political life today. Through episodes as diverse as Iran
Contra, George H. W. Bush vomiting in Japan, the 1992 Republican
convention, the failednomination of Lani Guinier, and the Iraq War,
This Is Not a President brilliantly situates our collective
investment in American political culture.
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