In 2003, the idea that Americans were from Mars and Europeans
from Venus stirred up serious conversation about the nature of the
transatlantic relationship on both sides of the Atlantic. While
useful in prompting discussion, the introduction of pop-psychology
terminology into IR lexicon was essentially divisive and not
analytically helpful. Kagan relied on journalistic generalization,
rather than tested academic methods to support his work. This study
rectifies that deficiency, exploring the extent to which Americans
are from Mars and Europeans from Venus by deploying the analytical
concept of strategic culture for an unbiased analysis of
transatlantic drift.
"Michael J. Williams" is a researcher at the Department of
Politics and International Relations at the University of Oxford
(UK).
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