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Rhetoric, Media, and the Narratives of US Foreign Policy: Making
Enemies studies the process of communicating threats to the US
public and explores when and why the American public believes
another country or regime is a threat. Through a comparative and
historical study, the author focuses on how the media environment
enables and constrains rhetorical strategies deployed to construct,
reproduce, and change narratives about a threat. Recent literature
on threat inflation, securitization, and critical security studies
returned to the concept of "threat." Building on this renewed
conceptual attention, this book examines why and how policy makers
and other public figures, in particular the President, convince the
public about a threat and will be of interest to students and
academics in the disciplines of political science, international
relations, foreign policy, security studies, and contemporary
history.
Rhetoric, Media, and the Narratives of US Foreign Policy: Making
Enemies studies the process of communicating threats to the US
public and explores when and why the American public believes
another country or regime is a threat. Through a comparative and
historical study, the author focuses on how the media environment
enables and constrains rhetorical strategies deployed to construct,
reproduce, and change narratives about a threat. Recent literature
on threat inflation, securitization, and critical security studies
returned to the concept of "threat." Building on this renewed
conceptual attention, this book examines why and how policy makers
and other public figures, in particular the President, convince the
public about a threat and will be of interest to students and
academics in the disciplines of political science, international
relations, foreign policy, security studies, and contemporary
history.
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