THESIS 9462How were the US military interventions in the \u27War on Terror\u27 possible? This thesis argues that intervention in the \u27War on Terror\u27 was rendered possible through the strategic use of language that located intervention as consistent with pre-existing societal narratives of national identity in the American context, particularly those associated with the idea of American Exceptionalism. The thesis will treat of the Foreign Policy discourse of the Bush Administration after September 11th 2001 in order to answer the above question. A secondary aim of this thesis is to contribute to the growing body of literature that takes a Discourse Theory approach to the study of International Relations
In September 2001 several states launched a series of counter-terrorism policies under the banner o...
This is a paper about the process of creating meaning in speeches held by president Bush after the t...
Following the attacks on September 11, 2001 (that killed approximately three thousand people) the Un...
honors thesisCollege of HumanitiesInternational StudiesEdmund FongAmerican exceptionalism is a multi...
Narratives are essential in the construction and breeding of social reality. The 9/11 attacks genera...
For the past fifty years, many scholarly works written on the subject of the American political trad...
In recent years a growing number of scholars within the field of Foreign Policy Analysis have assert...
This thesis examines to what extent American exceptionalism is a driving force behind U.S. military ...
This thesis seeks to understand the conditions in the United States post-9/11 that enabled the Bush ...
Following the attacks on September 11, 2001 (thatkilled approximately three thousand people) theUnit...
This article considers whether the Bush Doctrine seeks to establish a new rule for the preventitive ...
The aim of this paper is to assess the applicability of the Just War Tradition to a declaration of w...
Not since the Roman Empire has any nation had as much economic, cultural and military power as the U...
The United States has to a great extent asserted itself as a nation through the victories of its mil...
This thesis contends that the Vietnam Syndrome is an ingrained feature of American political culture...
In September 2001 several states launched a series of counter-terrorism policies under the banner o...
This is a paper about the process of creating meaning in speeches held by president Bush after the t...
Following the attacks on September 11, 2001 (that killed approximately three thousand people) the Un...
honors thesisCollege of HumanitiesInternational StudiesEdmund FongAmerican exceptionalism is a multi...
Narratives are essential in the construction and breeding of social reality. The 9/11 attacks genera...
For the past fifty years, many scholarly works written on the subject of the American political trad...
In recent years a growing number of scholars within the field of Foreign Policy Analysis have assert...
This thesis examines to what extent American exceptionalism is a driving force behind U.S. military ...
This thesis seeks to understand the conditions in the United States post-9/11 that enabled the Bush ...
Following the attacks on September 11, 2001 (thatkilled approximately three thousand people) theUnit...
This article considers whether the Bush Doctrine seeks to establish a new rule for the preventitive ...
The aim of this paper is to assess the applicability of the Just War Tradition to a declaration of w...
Not since the Roman Empire has any nation had as much economic, cultural and military power as the U...
The United States has to a great extent asserted itself as a nation through the victories of its mil...
This thesis contends that the Vietnam Syndrome is an ingrained feature of American political culture...
In September 2001 several states launched a series of counter-terrorism policies under the banner o...
This is a paper about the process of creating meaning in speeches held by president Bush after the t...
Following the attacks on September 11, 2001 (that killed approximately three thousand people) the Un...