Suchen und Finden

Titel

Autor

Inhaltsverzeichnis

Nur ebooks mit Firmenlizenz anzeigen:

 

Presidential Rhetoric from Wilson to Obama - Constructing crises, fast and slow

Presidential Rhetoric from Wilson to Obama - Constructing crises, fast and slow

Wesley Widmaier

 

Verlag Taylor and Francis, 2014

ISBN 9781317650072

Format PDF

Kopierschutz DRM

Geräte

55,39 EUR

Mehr zum Inhalt

Presidential Rhetoric from Wilson to Obama - Constructing crises, fast and slow


 

Over the past century, presidential constructions of crises have spurred recurring redefinitions of U.S. interests, as crusading advance has alternated with realist retrenchment. For example, Harry Truman and George W. Bush constructed crises that justified liberal crusades in the Cold War and War on Terror. In turn, each was followed by realist successors, as Dwight Eisenhower and Barack Obama limited U.S. commitments, but then struggled to maintain popular support. To make sense of such dynamics, this book synthesizes constructivist and historical institutionalist insights regarding the ideational overreactions that spur shifts across crusading excesses and realist counter-reactions. Widmaier juxtaposes what Daniel Kahneman terms the initial ",fast thinking", popular constructions of crises that justify liberal crusades, the ",slow thinking", intellectual conversion of such views in realist adjustments, and the tensions that can lead to renewed crises. This book also traces these dynamics historically across five periods - as Wilson's overreach limited Franklin Roosevelt to a reactive pragmatism, as Truman's Cold War crusading incited Eisenhower's restraint, as Kennedy-Johnson Vietnam-era crusading led to Nixon's revived realism, as Reagan's idealism yielded to a Bush-Clinton pragmatism, and as George W. Bush's crusading was followed by Obama's restraint. Widmaier concludes by addressing theoretical debates over punctuated change, historical debates over the scope for consensus, and policy debates over populist or intellectual excesses. This work will be of great interest to students and scholars of U.S. Foreign Policy