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Deconstructing "Ideal Power Europe": The EU and the Arab Change
Contributor(s): Cebeci, Münevver (Author)
ISBN: 1498539033     ISBN-13: 9781498539036
Publisher: Lexington Books
OUR PRICE:   $109.89  
Product Type: Hardcover - Other Formats
Published: December 2018
Qty:
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Political Science | International Relations - General
- Political Science | World - European
Series: Europe and the World
Physical Information: 0.5" H x 6" W x 9" (0.88 lbs) 156 pages
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:
Deconstructing "Ideal Power Europe" The EU and Arab Change criticizes the dominant discourse on European foreign policy, which represents the EU as a force for good in world politics. Using a poststructuralist approach, it deconstructs the EU's representation as "an ideal power" through an analysis of European foreign policy on the Southern Mediterranean before and after the Arab uprisings. In this endeavor, it displaces three major discourses which construct the EU as "ideal" the "postmodern and post-sovereign EU", "the EU as a model/a virtuous example", and, "the EU as a normative power" discourses. The major argument of the book is that the "ideal power Europe" meta-narrative is especially produced and reproduced in the EU's approach towards the Southern Mediterranean, and, it manifests itself through the rhetoric of "responsibility" and "universality" in the aftermath of the Arab uprisings. The book also provides an analysis of how the "ideal power Europe" meta-narrative feeds into and legitimizes European governmentality in the world, in general, and, in the case of the Southern Mediterranean after the Arab uprisings, in particular. Arguing that the depiction of the EU as postmodern/post-sovereign, as a model/an exemplar, and as a normative power pertains to the representation of a "regulatory ideal", it elucidates how the EU pursues hegemonic practices in the Southern Mediterranean. It further manifests how the EU's governmentality is marked by a securitized, depoliticizing, and technocratic approach which feeds into and gets legitimized by the dominant discourse on European foreign policy; reproducing the EU's "ideal" identity vis-à-vis its "imperfect" Arab other.