Contents
Introduction
Section 1. Old Concepts, New Ways
Cold War Foreign Policy in Latin America: The “Johnson Doctrine” and a Paradigm of War | José G. Izaguirre III
Rhetorics of Sovereignty in Vladimir Putin’s Ukraine War Messages | Stephen J. Heidt
On a Collision Course: A Rhetorical Analysis of the Anchorage Summit, Wolf Warrior Diplomacy, and the State of US-China Relations | Stephen J. Hartnett and Chiaoning Su
The Unnatural Rhetorical Career of Natural Rights: The US Commission on Unalienable Rights and the Problem of Difference in Global Governance | Zornitsa Keremidchieva
Section 2. New Concepts, Old Things
It Begins in Corruption, and Plunder, and Kidnapping: Slavery and the Law of Nations in the Early Republic | Robert Elliot Mills
The Return of the Secret: The Protocols of the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact, Baltic Independence, and US Foreign Policy Rhetoric in the Late 1980s | Kristen M. Einertson
Vernacular Foreign Policy in the Fatigue Press | Dominic J. Manthey
Section 3. New Approaches, Future Directions
The Ghosts of Development: Speech, Money, and Global Subject-Making at the Ford Foundation and the Kenya Women Finance Trust, Timothy Barney
How Community Organizations Do Care as Foreign Policy Actors, Belinda A. Stillion Southard
Transnational Rhetorical Approaches to Foreign Policy: Analytic Tracks to Examine the Global Refugee Crisis | Sara L. McKinnon
Contributors