ID | 138979 |
Title Proper | Leading from behind – American exceptionalism and president Obama’s post-American vision of hegemony |
Language | ENG |
Author | Lofflmann , Georg |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | This article explores the discursive performance and political significance of ‘American exceptionalism’ under President Obama. Moving beyond a critical examination of geopolitical identity, it investigates how representations of exceptionalism, understood as ideational construct of uniqueness and superiority, are linked to practices of US foreign and security policy that confirm, but also contest, established notions of American leadership in world politics. A particular focus lies on the 2012 presidential campaign, and how diverging ‘exceptionalist’ visions between Obama and Mitt Romney testified to competing ideas for American primacy and cooperative engagement. The article will further examine the cases of ‘leading from behind’ in Libya, American non-intervention against Assad in Syria, and US reactions to current crises concerning Ukraine and ISIS. The contextualisation of these episodes in contemporary, geopolitical discourse reveals how the practice of US foreign and security policy under Obama is shaped by a conflicted and paradoxical vision of post-American hegemony. |
`In' analytical Note | Geopolitics Vol. 20, No.2; 2015: p.308-332 |
Journal Source | Geopolitics Vol: 20 No 2 |
Key Words | World Politics ; Syria ; Libya ; Hegemony ; American Exceptionalism ; President Obama ; American Leadership ; Post - American Vision ; Geopolitical Discourse ; Post - American Hegemony |