Filtern
Dokumenttyp
- Dissertation (4)
- Buch (Monographie) (1)
Schlagworte
- USA (5) (entfernen)
Institut
- Politikwissenschaft (2)
- Anglistik (1)
- Fachbereich 2 (1)
- Rechtswissenschaft (1)
Der terroristische Anschlag auf das World Trade Center in New York am 11. September 2001 hat nicht nur den Themenkatalog der internationalen Politik durcheinandergebracht, sondern auch das Völkerrecht vor erhebliche Herausforderungen gestellt. Traditionell versteht man das Völkerrecht als ein Recht der zwischenstaatlichen Beziehungen. Terroristen werden als Kriminelle gesehen, die es mit allen Mitteln des Strafrechts zu bekämpfen gilt. Freilich versagen die üblichen Methoden der internationalen Zusammenarbeit, wenn ein Staat terroristischen Handlungen seine Rückendeckung gibt. Es bereitet erhebliche Schwierigkeiten, ein derartiges Komplizentum richtig einzuordnen. Im Mittelpunkt aller Überlegungen steht heute die Frage, ob Afghanistan durch die Usama bin Laden gewährte Unterstützung selbst einen bewaffneten Angriff gegen die USA geführt hat, der die USA nach Artikel 51 der UNO-Charta zur Selbstverteidigung berechtigt.
Verfuegen die USA ueber eine Sicherheitsstrategie fuer Suedostasien? Die grosse Mehrheit der Experten vertritt die Auffassung, dass sich die Politik Washingtons vor allem an tagespolitischen Erfordernissen orientiert. Entscheidungen werden demnach ad hoc gefaellt. Unklar ist dabei, von welchen Kriterien solche Bewertungen abhaengig gemacht werden: Was ist eine Strategie? An diesem Punkt setzt die vorliegende Abhandlung an und kommt zu dem Ergebnis, dass das Verhalten der USA in Suedostasien sicherheitsstrategischen Kriterien gerecht wird. Die Dissertation soll in drei Gebieten einen Beitrag zum Forschungsstand der politikwissenschaftlichen Teildisziplin der Internationalen Beziehungen leisten: Fuer den Begriff der Strategie werden, erstens, konkrete Messkriterien entwickelt. Innerhalb des realistischen Paradigmas wird, zweitens, der Forschungsstrang des funktionalen offensiven Realismus herausgearbeitet. Gezeigt wird, dass eine Akteursoeffnung auch unter systemischen Bedingungen moeglich ist, wozu methodisch die Instrumente der Impulsverarbeitung und Impulsumsetzung entwickelt werden. Der dabei entstandene idealtypische, theoretisch aufgeladene Strategiebegriff wird so formuliert, dass er fuer weitere Arbeiten, die sich mit staatlicher Sicherheitspolitik befassen, verwendbar ist. Empirisch traegt die Dissertation, drittens, zur Aufarbeitung des amerikanisch-chinesischen Wettbewerbs um Macht und Einfluss in Suedostasien bei. Dabei werden saemtliche bilateralen Beziehungen Chinas und der USA im ASEAN-Raum analysiert und aufeinander bezogen.
No Longer Printing the Legend: The Aporia of Heteronormativity in the American Western (1903-1969)
(2023)
This study critically investigates the U.S.-American Western and its construction of sexuality and gender, revealing that the heteronormative matrix that is upheld and defended in the genre is consistently preceded by the exploration of alternative sexualities and ways to think gender beyond the binary. The endeavor to naturalize heterosexuality seems to be baked in the formula of the U.S.-Western. However, as I show in this study, this endeavor relies on an aporia, because the U.S.-Western can only ever attempt to naturalize gender by constructing it first, hence inevitably and simultaneously construct evidence that supports the opposite: the unnaturalness and contingency of gender and sexuality.
My study relies on the works of Raewyn Connell, Pierre Bourdieu, and Judith Butler, and amalgamates in its methodology established approaches from film and literary studies (i.e., close readings) with a Foucaultian understanding of discourse and discourse analysis, which allows me to relate individual texts to cultural, socio-political and economical contexts that invariably informed the production and reception of any filmic text. In an analysis of 14 U.S.-Westerns (excluding three excursions) that appeared between 1903 and 1969 I give ample and minute narrative and film-aesthetical evidence to reveal the complex and contradictory construction of gender and sexuality in the U.S.-Western, aiming to reveal both the normative power of those categories and its structural instability and inconsistency.
This study proofs that the Western up until 1969 did not find a stable pattern to represent the gender binary. The U.S.-Western is not necessarily always looking to confirm or stabilize governing constructs of (gendered) power. However, it without fail explores and negotiates its legitimacy. Heterosexuality and male hegemony are never natural, self-evident, incontestable, or preordained. Quite conversely: the U.S.-Western repeatedly – and in a surprisingly diverse and versatile way – reveals the illogical constructedness of the heteronormative matrix.
My study therefore offers a fresh perspective on the genre and shows that the critical exploration and negotiation of the legitimacy of heteronormativity as a way to organize society is constitutive for the U.S.-Western. It is the inquiry – not necessarily the affirmation – of the legitimacy of this model that gives the U.S.-Western its ideological currency and significance as an artifact of U.S.-American popular culture.
As a target for condemnation, the thematic prevalence of racism in African American novels of satire is not surprising. In order to confront this vice in its shifting manifestations, however, the African American satirist has to employ special techniques. This thesis examines some of these devices as they occur in George Schuyler- Black No More, Charles Wright- The Wig, and Percival Everett- Erasure. Given the reciprocity of target and technique in the satiric context, close attention is paid to how the authors under study locate and interrogate racism in their narratives. In this respect, the significance of anti-essentialist Marxist criticism in Schuyler- Black No More and the author- portrayal of the society of his time as capitalist machinery is examined. While Schuyler is concerned with exposing the general socioeconomic workings of the 1920s from a Marxist perspective, Wright offers the reader perspective into how this oppressive machinery psychologically manipulates and corrupts the individual in the historic context of Lyndon B. Johnson- political vision of the Great Society. Everett then elaborates on the epistemological concern which is traceable in Wright- work and addresses the role media representation plays in manufacturing images and rigid categories that shape systematic racism. As such, the present study not only highlights the versatility of satire as a rhetorical secret weapon and thus ventures toward the idiosyncrasies of the African American novel of satire, it also makes an effort to trace the ever-changing face of racial discrimination.
The vision of a future information and communication society has prompted leading politicians in the United States, the European Union and Japan to influence or even lead the economic and social transition in the context of an active technology policy. The technological development of society, however, is a product of a complex interplay of technological, economic and socio-political constraints. These constraints limit the political decision-making and implementation abilities. Moreover, facts and information are continuously changing during a paradigmatic technological, economic and social shift, which limits political decision-making abilities. This study compares political decision-making to promote computer-mediated communications in the Triad since the beginning of the 1980s, on four levels: the development of a political vision, the long-term aims and strategies, technology policy (e.g. the promotion of technological development and competition policy) and regulatory policy (e.g. universal access, protection of privacy and intellectual property). While technology policy tends to be uncontroversial, during a paradigmatic shift regulatory policy is difficult and lengthy. Nevertheless, the inclusion of interest groups, which rise during this paradigmatic shift and which are close to the technologies and their societal consequences, help to aid decision-making processes. In this context, politics in the United States has been more successful that in the European Union and especially Japan. Although this study predates the rise of eCommerce over the Internet, it addresses many of the themes underlying it. Of these themes, many remain politically unsettled, both on national, supranational and especially international levels. For example, for encryption and secure payments, which are necessary for eCommerce, no international standards do yet exist. The issue of taxation has hardly been opened for discussions. In sum, this study does not only offer a historical overview of the development of the Internet, but it also discusses issues of continuing present concern.