Book contents
- Language in the Trump Era
- Language in the Trump Era
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Contributors
- Acknowledgments
- Note on Transcription Conventions
- Note on Ethnonyms and Phenotypic Descriptors
- Introduction: The Trump Era as a Linguistic Emergency
- Part I Dividing the American Public
- Part II Performance and Falsehood
- Part III The Interactive Making of the Trumpian World
- 9 Part III Introduction: Collusion: On Playing Along with the President
- 10 Banter, Male Bonding, and the Language of Donald Trump
- 11 On Social Routines and That Access Hollywood Bus
- 12 “Cocked and Loaded”: Trump and the Gendered Discourse of National Security
- 13 Evaluator in Chief
- 14 Fake Alignments
- Part IV Language, White Nationalism, and International Responses to Trump
- Index
- References
12 - “Cocked and Loaded”: Trump and the Gendered Discourse of National Security
from Part III - The Interactive Making of the Trumpian World
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 18 September 2020
- Language in the Trump Era
- Language in the Trump Era
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Contributors
- Acknowledgments
- Note on Transcription Conventions
- Note on Ethnonyms and Phenotypic Descriptors
- Introduction: The Trump Era as a Linguistic Emergency
- Part I Dividing the American Public
- Part II Performance and Falsehood
- Part III The Interactive Making of the Trumpian World
- 9 Part III Introduction: Collusion: On Playing Along with the President
- 10 Banter, Male Bonding, and the Language of Donald Trump
- 11 On Social Routines and That Access Hollywood Bus
- 12 “Cocked and Loaded”: Trump and the Gendered Discourse of National Security
- 13 Evaluator in Chief
- 14 Fake Alignments
- Part IV Language, White Nationalism, and International Responses to Trump
- Index
- References
Summary
On Jan 2, 2018, President Trump tweeted a taunt to Kim Jong-un of North Korea: “I too have a Nuclear Button, but it is a much bigger & more powerful one than his, and my Button works!” This chapter connects Trump’s nuclear saber-rattling to broader patterns of militaristic language use among nuclear weapons scientists and strategists, as well as among past presidents. Professional and political discourse about nuclear weapons tends to be far removed from the human realities behind the weapons. Such dispassionate language is characterized by stunningly abstract and euphemistic language – and in part by a set of lively and misogynistic sexual metaphors. This linguistic framework seems to shape what can be said, or even thought, within the confines of these male-dominated discussions of war. Those who urge restraint in responding to a provocation or attack, for instance, are quickly impugned as sissies, and expressions of empathy denigrated as feminine. In this respect, Mr. Trump is not an exception. His fear of being perceived as unmanly may be closer to the surface, but gendered language that constrains our understanding of reality has long distorted the ways we think about international politics and national security.
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- Language in the Trump EraScandals and Emergencies, pp. 179 - 190Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2020
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