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MonographDOI

Romantic narratives in international politics

TLDR
The authors argue that narratives are of fundamental importance for human cognition and identity construction, and they help us understand the social and political world in which we live, and emphasise the idea of intertextual narratability which holds that narratives to become dominant they have to link themselves to previously existing stories.
Abstract
By developing a new analytical method of narrative discourse analysis, this study introduces new insights from literary studies and narratology into International Relations. This method examines the romantic narratives of pirates in Somalia, rebels in Libya and private military and security companies in Iraq and argues that these best resonate with an audience if they are able to connect to culturally embedded narratives found in literature, media and pop-culture. Dominant romantic narratives marginalise other, less flattering, stories about these actors, in which they are constituted as terrorists and held responsible for human rights violations. Focusing on the three narrative elements of setting, characterization and employment, the book argues that narratives are of fundamental importance for human cognition and identity construction. They help us understand the social and political world in which we live. The book emphasises the idea of intertextual narratability which holds that for narratives to become dominant they have to link themselves to previously existing stories.

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Citations
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Just a bit of fun: the camouflaging and defending functions of humour in recruitment videos of the British and Swedish armed forces

TL;DR: This paper contributed to the growing literature regarding humor in international politics, focusing on satirical and comedic narratives in the recruitment videos of the British and Swedish armed forces, in the context of international politics.
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Identity change and societal pressures in Japan: the constraints on Abe Shinzo’s educational and constitutional reform

TL;DR: In this article, the authors tried to understand the dynamics of Japanese national identity and Abe Shinzo's revisionism and argued that although Abe has launched the strongest ever attack on Japanese pacifism, it is not the case that his revisionism will destroy Japan's national identity.
Journal ArticleDOI

The threat of thinking in threats: reframing global health during and after COVID-19

TL;DR: In this article, the authors conceptualize an alternative narrative that is based on the logic of solidarity and argue that within this alternative framing a more sustainable and ultimately more just way of coping with infectious diseases will be possible.
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Die Politik der Radikalisierung: Ein politisches Narrativ zwischen Komplexitätsreduzierung und Selbstvergewisserung

TL;DR: The authors rekonstruiert Radikalisierung daher als eigenstandiges politisches Narrativ and analysiert dazu offizielle Strategiepapiere aus dreizehn westlichen Staaten.
Journal ArticleDOI

Narratives and the romantic genre in IR: dominant and marginalized stories of Arab Rebellion in Libya

TL;DR: The authors show how the rebellion against Gaddafi in Libya in 2011 was romanticized in the British newspaper media and among the political elite, by emphasizing story elements which constitute the rebellion in an emotional setting in which the rebel is characterized as a young and brave underdog fighting against a brutal and oppressive regime for an ideal such as democracy, freedom and a better future.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Anarchy is what states make of it: the social construction of power politics

TL;DR: The debate between realists and liberals has reemerged as an axis of contention in international relations theory as mentioned in this paper, and the debate is more concerned today with the extent to which state action is influenced by "structure" versus "process" and institutions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Tropics of discourse : essays in cultural criticism

TL;DR: The Tropics of Discourse as mentioned in this paper develops White's ideas on interpretation in history, on the relationship between history and the novel, and on history and historicism, including the Wild Man and the Noble Savage.
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