Taryn Shepperd
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The United States’ identity crisis
Emotions, image, and US foreign policy under Trump and Biden
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Foreign policy is not only complex, it is sensitive – to both change and perceived insult. While emotions might not be the first word to spring to mind when thinking of US foreign policy this chapter illustrates how emotions matter in our analysis, and understanding, of US foreign policy. It does so by investigating their role and impact in recent US foreign policy behaviour by analysing the role of emotions in Trump’s discourses and juxtaposing these findings with a competing framework set out by the Biden administration. A comparison which suggests that both visions of America are emotionally informed but of radically different natures. Despite the fact that emotions continue to be seen as individual, private, often ‘irrational’, and largely undesired in policymaking, this chapter sheds light on their influence, and pervasiveness, in political life, specifically – in this instance – on the production of US foreign policy. Emotions, it is argued, play a role in perceptions, and assessments as to what constitutes a threat, and what constitutes an interest in international relations. They inform how relationships and external developments are ascribed meaning. Being aware of this in the academic sphere will help the discipline gain a more accurate understanding of developments taking place in the world. Being aware of this in the policy sphere, and adopting more emotionally intelligent approaches to managing relationships and commitments in the international sphere – it is forwarded – will help avoid conflict, and hold considerable potential in terms of the attainment of soft power in future endeavours.

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