American Journalism and International Relations argues that the
American press' disengagement from world affairs has critical
repercussions for American foreign policy. Giovanna Dell'Orto shows
that discourses created, circulated, and maintained through the
media mold opinions about the world and shape foreign policy
parameters. This book is a history of U.S. foreign correspondence
from the 1840s to the present, relying on more than 2,000 news
articles and twenty major world events, from the 1848 European
revolutions to the Mumbai terror attacks in 2008. Americans'
perceptions of other nations, combined with pervasive and enduring
understandings of the United States' role in global politics, act
as constraints on policies. Dell'Orto finds that reductive media
discourse (as seen during the 1967 War in the Middle East or
Afghanistan in the 1980s) has a negative effect on policy, whereas
correspondence grounded in events (such as during the Japanese
attack on Shanghai in the 1930s or the dissolution of the Soviet
Union in 1991) fosters effective leadership and realistic
assessments.
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