Chapter 4: Constructivism

January 17, 2018 | Author: Anonymous | Category: Social Science, Sociology
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Chapter 4: Constructivism Is anarchy what states make of it?

© 2014 Cynthia Weber

Learning aims: Be able to identify how constructivism differs (and doesn’t) from realism and liberalism

Understand the fundamental principles of constructivist social theory and what Wendt means when he claims that “international anarchy is what states make of it”

To critically interrogate Wendt’s state-centric constructivism

To critically engage with the advantages and disadvantages of Wendtian constructivism

© 2014 Cynthia Weber

Last week: Myth: “there is an international society”

Key concepts: International society, communication, domestic analogy

What appears to be international society may also just be US domestic society extended globally

© 2014 Cynthia Weber

Constructivism flashcard

Key thinkers:

Key concepts:

Alexander Wendt & Nicholas G. Onuf

Social construction Identities Practices

Myth: “anarchy is what states make of it”

© 2014 Cynthia Weber

Three fundamental principles of constructivist social theory (box 4.2) 1. “People act toward objects, including other actors, on the basis of the meanings that the objects have for them” 

SOCIAL KNOWLEDGE

2. “The meanings in terms of which action is organized arise out of interaction” 

SOCIAL PRACTICE

3. “Identities [and interests] are produced in and through ‘situated activity’” 

IDENTITIES AND INTERESTS © 2014 Cynthia Weber

Constructivism Wendtian constructivism No logic to anarchy Anarchy is an effect of practice “Anarchy is what states make of it” (Neo)realism

Neoliberalism

Logic of anarchy is structural and leads to conflict

Logic of anarchy is a process that can lead to cooperation

© 2014 Cynthia Weber

Constructivism Table 4.2 Three stories of international anarchy Realism

Idealism

Constructivism

Actors

States

States

States

Goals

Survival

Survival

Survival

Actors’ behavior in anarchy

Increase power to Promoting social learning ensure survival through • Institutions (e.g. UN) • Ideas (e.g. democracy and liberal capitalism)

Unpredictable prior to social interaction

What mitigates state behavior?

Self help because • No world government (anarchy) • Cooperation among states unreliable

International society

Intersubjectively constituted structure of identities and interests • If state identities and interests produced as competitive  competition • If state identities and interests produced as cooperative  cooperation

Logic of anarchy

Conflictual

Cooperative

Anarchy is what states make of it

© 2014 Cynthia Weber

Advantages and disadvantages of Wendtian compromise Table 4.5 Advantages and disadvantages of the Wendtian compromise Advantages

Disadvantages

Can hold states accountable for their part in producing anarchy as either conflictual or cooperative

• Cannot escape reification because Wendt replaces a reified logic of anarchy with reified states • Misses the opportunity to restore a broad focus on process and practice in international politics because Wendt must exclude from consideration the practices that produce states as products of anarchy in order for his myth to function

© 2014 Cynthia Weber

Theory activity: Rationalism, reflectivism and the politics of bridge building • Aim: To think critically about Wendt’s aims at bridge building and what it means for the reflectivist critique • Answer the following question in groups (7 min.) – What is rationalism and reflectivism? – How does Wendtian constructivism attempt to build a bridge between rationalism and reflectivism? • Either as whole group or in smaller groups discuss the following (7 min.): – What are the politics of Wendt’s move? – What does this move mean for rationalism and reflectivism respectively? – Is it really possible to bridge two traditions? © 2014 Cynthiathese Weber

Theory activity: What is wrong with rationalism? (box 4.1)

1. Rationalism takes the identities and interests of states as given because it only recognizes changes in states’ behavior but not in states themselves (i.e. their identities and interests)

2. Rationalism also takes the identities of and the interests generated from international anarchy as given. For rationalists, neither the structure of international anarchy nor the self-help system is said to produce can be changed

© 2014 Cynthia Weber

3. Overall, rationalism limits theoretical understandings of change in agents and structure because it only examines changes in behavior and excludes an examination changes in identities and interests

What seems to be typical and deviant in the world of Wag the Dog (table 4.3) Typical

Deviant

For the tail (spin doctors and policy-makers) to wag the dog (the US public

For the dog (the US public) to wag its tail (spin doctors and policy-makers)

© 2014 Cynthia Weber

Reconsidering what is typical and deviant in the world of Wag the Dog

Typical

Deviant

For the tale (mediatic practices) to wag the tail (producers/spin doctors) so that it appears that the tail (producers) wags the dog (US public)

Either:

 For the dog (US public) to wag its tail (producers/ spin doctors/policy-makers) Or  For the tail (producers/ spin doctors/ policy-makers) to “really” wag the dog (US public) without being wagged by the tale (mediatic practices) itself

© 2014 Cynthia Weber

Production and seduction in Wag the Dog Connie: You can’t do it Stanley: [angrily] Don’t you tell me that. Don’t you ever tell me that. I’m the producer of this show. [looks out the window at the set where the patriotic funeral for the returned war hero is being shot] Look at that. That is a complete fucking fraud, and it looks one hundred percent real. [contemplatively, softly] It’s the best work I’ve ever done in my whole life, because it’s so honest…[insistently] I tell you, for once in my life I will not be pissed on. I want…I want the credit. I want the credit (Wag the Dog)

“Seduction doesn’t just tease us into wanting what we cannot see. It convinces us that there is something there to be seen” (Weber, 2013)

‘The tale itself tricks us into thinking that there is an author of the tale’ (Weber, 2013)

© 2014 Cynthia Weber

Film activity: Updating Wag the Dog Aim: Think about how the role of authorship, seduction, production and the media might have changed from 1997 to today

Task 1: In small groups come up with a basic film plot which updates Wag the Dog to today considering the following (7 min.):

1.Could the role of the producer be the same today as in 1997? 2.What in the plot would need to change and what could be kept for it to make sense today? 3.Which characters could you keep and who would need to be added?

1.With the changes you have made to your movie, how does this affect the role of authorship and seduction?

Task 2: Either in small groups or together discuss the following questions (7 min.):

2.Who would take the role of the producer (Stanley in Wag the Dog) in your film? 3.Consider the statement: “Seduction doesn't just tease us into wanting what we cannot see. It convinces us that there is something there to be seen” (Weber, 2013). Is this more or less true in your film (today) than in Wag the Dog (1997)?

© 2014 Cynthia Weber

Next week: Gender Feminisms place in IR

Film:

Femininity

Fatal Attraction

Masculinity

Is gender a variable?

© 2014 Cynthia Weber

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