Ronald R. Krebs is Associate Professor in the Department of Political Science at the University of Minnesota. He is the author of Fighting for Rights: Military Service and the Politics of Citizenship (2006) and co-editor of In War's Wake: International Conflict and the Fate of Liberal Democracy (Cambridge, 2011). His articles on a wide range of topics in international relations have appeared in leading scholarly journals, including International Organization, International Security, the European Journal of International Relations, and Security Studies, as well as in outlets such as Foreign Affairs, ForeignPolicy.com, Slate, and the Washington Post.
1. Narrating national security
Part I. Crisis, Authority, and Rhetorical Mode: The Fate of Narrative Projects, from the Battle against Isolationism to the War on Terror: 2. Domination and the art of storytelling
3. Narrative lost: missed and mistaken opportunities
4. Narrative won: opportunities seized
Part II. Narrative at War: Politics and Rhetorical Strategy in the Military Crucible, from Korea to Iraq: 5. The narrative politics of the battlefield
6. Tracking the Cold War consensus
7. Tracing the Cold War consensus
8. Puzzles of the Cold War, lessons for the War on Terror
9. Narrative in an age of fracture
Appendices.