Resowing the seeds of war : presidential peace rhetoric since 1945 / Stephen J. Heidt.
Material type: TextSeries: Rhetoric and public affairs seriesPublisher: East Lansing : Michigan State University Press, [2021州scription: 1 online resource (xxxvi, 329 pages)Content type:- text
- computer
- online resource
- 1609176596
- 9781628954180
- 1628954183
- 9781628964196
- 1628964197
- 9781609176594
- Communication in politics -- United States -- History -- 21st century
- Communication in politics -- United States -- History -- 20th century
- Presidents -- United States -- Language -- History -- 20th century
- Presidents -- United States -- Language -- History -- 21st century
- Peace-building, American -- History -- 20th century
- Peace-building, American -- History -- 21st century
- Rhetoric -- Political aspects -- United States -- History -- 20th century
- Rhetoric -- Political aspects -- United States -- History -- 21st century
- LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES / General
- Rhetoric -- Political aspects
- Presidents -- Language
- Peace-building, American
- Communication in politics
- United States
- 327.1/720973
- JA85.2.U6
Includes bibliographical references and index.
"Ending a war, as Fred Charles Ikl�e wrote, poses a much greater challenge than beginning one. In addition to issues related to battle tactics, prisoners of war, diplomatic relations, and cease-fire negotiations, ending war involves domestic political calculations. Balancing the tides of public opinion versus policy needs poses a deep and enduring problem for presidents. In a first-of-its-kind study, Resowing the Seeds of War explains how Presidents Truman, Eisenhower, Nixon, and Obama managed the political, policy, and bureaucratic challenges that arise at the end of war via a series of rhetorical choices that reframe, modify, or unravel depictions of national enemies, the cause of the conflict, and the stakes for the nation and world. This end-of-war rhetoric justifies ending hostilities, rationalizes postwar national policy, argues for the construction of postwar security arrangements, and often sustains public support for massive financial investment in reconstruction. By tracking presidential manipulations of savage imagery from World War II to the War on Terror, this book concludes that even as metaphoric reframing facilitates exit from conflict, it incurs unexpected consequences that make national involvement in the next conflict more likely."-- EBSCOhost product page, viewed September 15, 2021.
The recivilized savage : Harry Truman and the victory of the Good War -- The mobile savage : Harry Truman, Dwight Eisenhower, and stalemate in Korea -- Erasing the savage : Richard Nixon, the architecture of peace, and the eternal Vietnam -- The disembodied savage : Barack Obama and the perpetuity of national violence -- War, the globalization of violence, and the sovereign power of the present.
Online resource; title from digital title page (EBSCOhost, viewed September 15, 2021).
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