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Journal Article

Citation

Robinson N. Millennium J. Int. Stud. 2015; 43(2): 450-470.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2015, London School of Economics and Political Science, Millennium Publishing Group, Publisher SAGE Publishing)

DOI

10.1177/0305829814557557

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Videogames matter and they matter for international politics. With popular culture increasingly acknowledged as a valuable site for opening up new ways of interrogating theory, this article argues that important insights for the critical understanding of American exceptionalism can be developed through the study of military videogames. At one level, military videogames illustrate a number of prominent themes within American exceptionalism: they offer the perception that a threatening and hostile environment confronts the USA, thus situating America as an innocent victim, justified in using force in response; they allow exploration of the link between American exceptionalism and debates on the competence of political leadership, and they open up space to analyse the temporal dimension of international relations. Yet videogames also help expose the foundations (what Weber terms 'the myths') upon which American exceptionalism is based, here shown to be centred on the importance of the military industrial complex as a source of exceptionalism.


Language: en

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