ABSTRACT

Foreign and security policy have long been removed from the political pressures that influence other areas of policymaking. This has led to a tendency to separate the analytical levels of the individual and the collective.

Using Lacanian theory, which views the subject as ontologically incomplete and desiring a perfect identity which is realised in fantasies, or narrative scenarios, this book shows that the making of foreign policy is a much more complex process. Emotions and affect play an important role, even where ‘hard’ security issues, such as the use of military force, are concerned. Eberle constructs a new theoretical framework for analysing foreign policy by capturing the interweaving of both discursive and affective aspects in policymaking. He uses this framework to explain Germany’s often contradictory foreign policy towards the Iraq crisis of 2002/2003, and the emotional, even existential, public debate that accompanied it.

This book adds to ongoing theoretical debates in International Political Sociology and Critical Security Studies and will be required reading for all scholars working in these areas.

chapter 1|11 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|26 pages

The logics approach

Discourse, affect and critical explanation

chapter 3|21 pages

Rethinking foreign policy

Including affect, encircling decisions

chapter 4|25 pages

Contradictory common sense

Iraq war and social logics of German foreign policy

chapter 5|22 pages

Constructing crisis

Political logics and the madness of decision

chapter 6|27 pages

Affective disorder and the desire for closure

Fantasy and the fantasmatic logic

chapter 7|9 pages

Conclusion