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6 - Champions of Freedom or Imperialists: How We're Perceived

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  31 July 2009

Steven Rosefielde
Affiliation:
University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
D. Quinn Mills
Affiliation:
Harvard University, Massachusetts
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Summary

Americans see big differences among ourselves; some of us are conservatives, some liberals; some are Republicans, some Democrats. Some are moderates, a few are radicals (of either the left or the right). Looked at from abroad, except among a few people who make it their business to be very familiar with our politics, these distinctions are very hard to perceive. Americans seem a lot alike. There seems little difference among the political parties, and less among the candidates they offer for president. Many, perhaps most, Europeans, for example, were stunned during the 2004 presidential campaign debates when both candidates (Kerry and Bush) endorsed military preemption against threats from abroad. What stand out to others are the things we have in common; and the most evident of these is our public culture – its optimism and its illusions.

HOW WE AND OTHERS SEE US

A most important element of our public culture is our view of ourselves. It's shaped by the same forces (wishful thinking, partisan politics, and media commercialism) as are other elements of our public culture, and it is reflected in misapprehensions and misinformation as well. Our politicians and our media tell us what we want to hear about ourselves. But our self-image is more complex and self-contradictory than other parts of our public culture. This is most easily seen when we contrast our self-image with the perception of America abroad.

Type
Chapter
Information
Masters of Illusion
American Leadership in the Media Age
, pp. 103 - 116
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2006

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