Title of article :
To Be a Diplomat
Author/Authors :
Iver B. Neumann، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2005
Abstract :
How do diplomats experience the world? Drawing mainly on fieldwork
in the Norwegian Ministry of Foreign Affairs, I argue that being a diplomat
involves juggling three scripts of self against one another. The
bureaucratic script tells the diplomat to focus squarely on quotidian
concerns and to follow previously established routines. The heroic script
tells him or her to focus squarely on a specific task in order to make a
difference in the world, or at least to rove about the world, preferably
involved in trouble-shooting. A third script is the self-effacing one of
‘‘the mediator,’’ of the diplomat as a specialist in making what happens
at the outside of a political entity seem to dovetail as smoothly as possible
with what happens at its inside. These scripts cannot be reconciled, only
juggled. The uncertain predicament in which this places the diplomat is
aggravated not only by tensions between professional and private life
but also by the nomadic lifestyle of trekking between a home base in the
ministry and sundry postings abroad. I conclude that being a diplomat is
a never-ending and self-effacing technique of self, in the sense that the
end product of diplomatic work is to let processes that are already in
motion either go on or to have them stopped
Keywords :
diplomacy , identity , Bureaucracy
Journal title :
International Studies Perspectives
Journal title :
International Studies Perspectives