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After Empire

Myth, Rhetoric, and Democratic Revival

by Robert L. Ivie (Author) Oscar Giner (Author)
©2024 Textbook X, 158 Pages

Summary

This book probes the mythic underpinnings of U.S. war culture, asking how myth can be reconfigured to foster a discourse more conducive to a culture of peace. It breaks with an imperial mindset of endless warfare and places myth’s creative potential into productive relationship with rhetoric’s democratic vocation to foster an attitude of tolerance and interdependence and resist the violence of alienation. Drawing on the archetype of coyote and manifestations of a people’s better angels, the book examines both the resistance of imperial orthodoxy to critique and susceptibility to cultural change. It locates Barack Obama’s presidency and rhetorical juggling at the threshold of a shifting hemispheric consciousness and explores the prophetic voice of veterans opposed to war, a voice that prefigures the possibility of conversion to a culture of peace. The book culminates in consideration of democracy’s renewal by means of rhetorically adept dissent to enable deliberation amidst conflict.

After Empire chronicles America’s addiction to war-in-the-name-of-peace, wherein the military-industrial complex entwines with crippling national mythologies. Drs. Ivie and Giner argue that by seeing the world as a series of threats, our imaginations have shriveled, leaving us rotating from self-righteous exceptionalism to other-fearing doubts. Moving past that dynamic, the authors plot a "passage to democracy," where the nation grows out of imperial hubris and into mature, deliberative democracy.
Stephen J. Hartnett, Professor, Department of Communication, University of Colorado, Denver

In After Empire: Myth, Rhetoric, and Democratic Revival, Robert L. Ivie and Oscar Giner unpack the way that contemporary American myths of war have played a role in legitimizing war and creating an American empire built around a militarized society. They show that creation of an alternative mythology privileging dissent is essential to rebuilding American democracy. The book is cogently argued, based on groundbreaking research on myth and militarism, and a genuine pleasure to read!
Robert C. Rowland, Professor, Department of Communication Studies, University of Kansas

After Empire offers both an analysis of contemporary US war culture and an intervention into it in the hope of making the US a healthier democracy. Focusing on the intersection of politics, popular culture, and myth, and deftly integrating theory, method, and substantive content, Ivie and Giner provide a map of the current US public sphere in ways that will interest academics as well as practitioners and prove useful for courses in rhetoric, history, and political science. 
Mary E. Stuckey, Edwin Erle Sparks Professor of Communication Arts & Sciences, Pennsylvania State University, University Park

Table Of Contents


Library of Congress Cataloging- in- Publication Data

Names: Ivie, Robert L., author. | Giner, Oscar, 1953-author.
Title: After empire: myth, rhetoric, and democratic revival / Robert L.
Ivie, Oscar Giner.
Description: New York: Peter Lang, [2024] | Series: Frontiers in political
communication, 1525-9730; vol. 51 | Includes bibliographical references
and index.
Identifiers: LCCN 2023055924 (print) | LCCN 2023055925 (ebook) | ISBN
9781636678474 (hardback) | ISBN 9781636675480 (paperback) | ISBN
9781636675497 (ebook) | ISBN 9781636675503 (epub)
Subjects: LCSH: Rhetoric– Political aspects– United States– History– 21st
century. | Political culture– United States– History– 21st century. |
Obama, Barack– Oratory. | Strategic culture– United States. | United
States– Foreign relations– 2009-2017. | Democracy– United States.
Classification: LCC P301.5.P67 I95 2024 (print) | LCC P301.5.P67 (ebook)
| DDC 808.5/1– dc23/eng/20240223
LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2023055924
LC ebook record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2023055925
DOI 10.3726/b21656

Cover design by Peter Lang Group AG

ISSN 1525-9730 (print)
ISBN 9781636675480 (paperback)
ISBN 9781636678474 (hardback)
ISBN 9781636675497 (ebook)
ISBN 9781636675503 (epub)
DOI 10.3726/b21656

All rights reserved.
All parts of this publication are protected by copyright.
Any utilization outside the strict limits of the copyright law, without the permission of the
publisher, is forbidden and liable to prosecution.
This applies in particular to reproductions, translations, microfilming, and storage and
processing in electronic retrieval systems.

This publication has been peer reviewed.

About the author

Robert L. Ivie is Professor Emeritus in English (Rhetoric) and American Studies at Indiana University, Bloomington. His writing on political rhetoric, war culture, and democratic discourse includes Hunt the Devil: A Demonology of US War Culture (2015) with Oscar Giner, Dissent from War (2007), and Democracy and America’s War on Terror (2005).

Oscar Giner, Professor of Theatre at Arizona State University, focusing on myth and ritual in the Spanish religious stage and Native American performances, has contributed to Rhetoric, Materiality and Politics (2009) and Sourcebook for Political Communication Research (2011) and coauthored Hunt the Devil: A Demonology of US War Culture (2015).

About the book

This book probes the mythic underpinnings of U.S. war culture, asking how myth can be reconfigured to foster a discourse more conducive to a culture of peace. It breaks with an imperial mindset of endless warfare and places myth’s creative potential into productive relationship with rhetoric’s democratic vocation to foster an attitude of tolerance and interdependence and resist the violence of alienation. Drawing on the archetype of coyote and manifestations of a people’s better angels, the book examines both the resistance of imperial orthodoxy to critique and susceptibility to cultural change. It locates Barack Obama’s presidency and rhetorical juggling at the threshold of a shifting hemispheric consciousness and explores the prophetic voice of veterans opposed to war, a voice that prefigures the possibility of conversion to a culture of peace. The book culminates in consideration of democracy’s renewal by means of rhetorically adept dissent to enable deliberation amidst conflict.

This eBook can be cited

This edition of the eBook can be cited. To enable this we have marked the start and end of a page. In cases where a word straddles a page break, the marker is placed inside the word at exactly the same position as in the physical book. This means that occasionally a word might be bifurcated by this marker.

Contents

Introduction1

Yet soul be sure the first intent remains, and shall be carried out,

Perhaps even now the time has arrived.

Walt Whitman, “Passage to India”2

The people of the United States are trapped in the mythology of war. At the beginning of the twenty-first century, a legacy of Indian war, revolutionary war, frontier war, civil war, imperial war, world war, and cold war culminated in an open-ended war on terror. Militarism molded the national identity into a patriotic ethos of moral supremacy, advanced weaponry, and global dominion. It circumscribed the nation’s sense of reality, including what citizens believed to be the actual state of world affairs, and restricted what they thought could and should be changed. The so-called “Forever War” on terrorism eventually morphed into what Karen J. Greenberg called “the era of Eternal War” in which a proxy war in Ukraine too easily could turn into a direct confrontation between nuclear superpowers, geopolitical tensions with China might break out into war over Taiwan or elsewhere, and ongoing frictions with Iran, North Korea, and Syria could escalate, even as the continuing war on terrorism was refocused on Africa. War had become “ever more accepted as a permanent condition.”3 Living in anything but a state of war was nearly unthinkable, at least for the foreseeable future.

A mindset of exceptionalism—the mythic sensibility of a savior nation exempted from normal constraints on war making—masked an imperial hubris that rendered the country always insecure in an alien world of perceived evildoers. Empire’s war culture was sustained by a deeply embedded and ritually enacted devil myth and outward projections of evil. It reduced democracy to a rationalization for war. Democracy became something to contain and defend rather than practice.4 The prospect of democratic life in imperial America was reduced to fantasy.5

Details

Pages
X, 158
Year
2024
ISBN (PDF)
9781636675497
ISBN (ePUB)
9781636675503
ISBN (Softcover)
9781636675480
ISBN (Hardcover)
9781636678474
DOI
10.3726/b21656
Language
English
Publication date
2024 (April)
Keywords
U.S. empire war culture mythology of war creative myth metaphor tropes trickster coyote angels rhetoric dissent democracy democratic renewal culture of peace positive peace veterans for peace productive rhetorical criticism After Empire Myth, Rhetoric, and Democratic Revival Robert L. Ivie Oscar Giner
Published
New York, Berlin, Bruxelles, Chennai, Lausanne, Oxford, 2024. X, 158 pp., 1 col ill.

Biographical notes

Robert L. Ivie (Author) Oscar Giner (Author)

Robert L. Ivie is Professor Emeritus in English (Rhetoric) and American Studies at Indiana University, Bloomington. His writing on political rhetoric, war culture, and democratic discourse includes Hunt the Devil: A Demonology of US War Culture (2015) with Oscar Giner, Dissent from War (2007), and Democracy and America’s War on Terror (2005). Oscar Giner, Professor of Theatre at Arizona State University, focusing on myth and ritual in the Spanish religious stage and Native American performances, has contributed to Rhetoric, Materiality and Politics (2009) and Sourcebook for Political Communication Research (2011) and coauthored Hunt the Devil: A Demonology of US War Culture (2015).

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