Title of article :
Independence Day as a Cosmopolitan Moment: Teaching International Relations
Author/Authors :
Julie Webber، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2005
Abstract :
This essay expands upon a teaching approach that I used in my introductory
international relations (IR) course for three semesters prior to
September 11, 2001. The vast majority of the curriculum of the course is
read through Independence Day, a 1996 blockbuster Hollywood film. Beginning
with the film and the concept of world order it arguably provides
through a fictional moment of world peace (or hegemony,
depending how one interprets the leading role of the U.S. in the film
and the significance of the Fourth of July holiday as the world’s Independence
Day, hence ID4) students are able to understand several key
concepts in IR theory, as well as the major paradigms of IR thought that
I present to them. ID4 presents the viewer with the IR field’s two great
mythological narratives, realism and idealism, and preserves the notion
of the nation-state as the predominant actor and unit of analysis for
understanding world history and key events in that history.
Keywords :
national identification , Transference , social antagonism , image repertoire
Journal title :
International Studies Perspectives
Journal title :
International Studies Perspectives