What fear hath wrought : missile hysteria and the writing of "America"
Scholars have linked the perpetuation of US militarism to ideological constructions of the Soviet Union as a dangerous "Other". These constructions partly stemmed from the ways in which various discourses-realist scholarship in international relations, strategic studies, nuclear stategy, g...
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sg-ntu-dr.10356-905402020-11-01T08:48:11Z What fear hath wrought : missile hysteria and the writing of "America" Tan, See Seng S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies DRNTU::Social sciences::Military and naval science Scholars have linked the perpetuation of US militarism to ideological constructions of the Soviet Union as a dangerous "Other". These constructions partly stemmed from the ways in which various discourses-realist scholarship in international relations, strategic studies, nuclear stategy, geopolitics, Sovietology, communism, and so on-were structured. Using recent US national security discourse on missile defence, this study examines the relationship between US national and theatre missile defense policy and discursive constructions of "rogue states" and the "China threat" as potentially dangerous Others which ostensibly threaten the US. More fundamentally, this study argues that such constructions of danger in US security discourse are crucial precisely because they matter to the ways in which the very identity of "America" are known and understood. 2009-02-05T09:32:43Z 2019-12-06T17:49:29Z 2009-02-05T09:32:43Z 2019-12-06T17:49:29Z 2002 2002 Working Paper Tan, S. S. (2002). What fear hath wrought : missile hysteria and the writing of "America". (RSIS Working Paper, No. 28). Singapore: Nanyang Technological University. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/90540 http://hdl.handle.net/10220/4428 RSIS Working Papers ; 028/02 Nanyang Technological University 34 p. application/pdf |
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DRNTU::Social sciences::Military and naval science Tan, See Seng What fear hath wrought : missile hysteria and the writing of "America" |
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Scholars have linked the perpetuation of US militarism to ideological constructions of the Soviet Union as a dangerous "Other". These constructions partly stemmed from the ways in which various discourses-realist scholarship in international relations, strategic studies, nuclear stategy, geopolitics, Sovietology, communism, and so on-were structured. Using recent US national security discourse on missile defence, this study examines the relationship between US national and theatre missile defense policy and discursive constructions of "rogue states" and the "China threat" as potentially dangerous Others which ostensibly threaten the US. More fundamentally, this study argues that such constructions of danger in US security discourse are crucial precisely because they matter to the ways in which the very identity of "America" are known and understood. |
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S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies |
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S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies Tan, See Seng |
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Working Paper |
author |
Tan, See Seng |
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Tan, See Seng |
title |
What fear hath wrought : missile hysteria and the writing of "America" |
title_short |
What fear hath wrought : missile hysteria and the writing of "America" |
title_full |
What fear hath wrought : missile hysteria and the writing of "America" |
title_fullStr |
What fear hath wrought : missile hysteria and the writing of "America" |
title_full_unstemmed |
What fear hath wrought : missile hysteria and the writing of "America" |
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what fear hath wrought : missile hysteria and the writing of "america" |
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2009 |
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https://hdl.handle.net/10356/90540 http://hdl.handle.net/10220/4428 |
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