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List of figures
About the author
Preface and acknowledgments
1 Threats as social facts
2 Toward a theory of threat legitimation
3 “Sister” Chile and “saving” Cuba: newspaper and logos
4 Democracy and dictatorship: threats of Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union during the radio age
5 Freedom fighters and the drug lord: threats of Nicaragua and Noriega during television media ecology
6 Conclusion
Index

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Rhetoric, media, and the narratives of US foreign policy : making enemies 이용현황 표 - 등록번호, 청구기호, 권별정보, 자료실, 이용여부로 구성 되어있습니다.
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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.



This book 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.