From 'Japan Problem' to 'China Threat'?: Rising Powers in US Economic Discourse (Global Political Sociology)

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Management number 233312879 Release Date 2026/06/27 List Price US$30.58 Model Number 233312879
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This book has four main objectives: to bring the thus far almost entirely neglected historical case of ‘the rise of Japan’ into the literature on power shifts in general and ‘the rise of China’ in particular; to propose a discourse-based conceptualization of identity for the study of economic policy that engages theoretical and methodological debates on how to overcome the dichotomy between ‘ideational’ (identity) and ‘material’ (economic) factors; to address the tendency to focus on the ‘radical Other’ in poststructuralist IR scholarship, by highlighting how heterogeneity disturbs exclusive and binary articulations of identity and difference; and to propose a method for putting political discourse theory (PDT) into practice in empirical research by drawing on rhetorical political analysis (RPA). US congressional debates on economic policy on Japan and China in 1985–2008 are analysed as examples of official US elite public discourse. The book shows that the ‘new era’ in US-Chinese relations that scholars and policymakers have been announcing since the beginning of the Trump presidency was long in the making, as it rests on longstanding discourses on the USA’s main economic competitor. Read more

ISBN10 3030449505
ISBN13 978-3030449506
Edition 1st ed. 2020
Language English
Publisher Palgrave Macmillan
Dimensions 6 x 0.75 x 8.5 inches
Item Weight 15.2 ounces
Print length 258 pages
Part of series Global Political Sociology
Publication date July 17, 2020

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