Barack Obama and the African Idea: Topology, Tropology, and Stasis in Spatial Counter Narratives
Issue Date
2012-12-31Author
Chirindo, Kundai V.
Publisher
University of Kansas
Format
129 pages
Type
Dissertation
Degree Level
Ph.D.
Discipline
Communication Studies
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This item is protected by copyright and unless otherwise specified the copyright of this thesis/dissertation is held by the author.
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There is no region of world outside of the United States where Obama's meteoric rise generated as much excitement as in Africa. It is also uncontroversial to assert that Obama's rhetorical skill was a major factor behind his success. Yet surprisingly little work has been done on the intersection of Obama's discourse and its effect on Africa. This study endeavors to fill this gap in the scholarship on Obama. Drawing on the tools of rhetoric--theories about topology, tropology and stasis, this dissertation traces the visions of Africa implicit in Obama's rhetoric and politics. The study analyzes Obama's ideas of Africa in three stages of his political career; before he was a national figure, during his campaigns, and in his Africa policy after he became president. In short, I argue that the ideas of Africa conveyed in the discourse of Obama challenge conventional wisdom on the continent's significance in global affairs. While demonstrating Obama's visions of Africa, the study also demonstrates the utility of rhetorical theories in both domestic politics and international relations. There are three findings that emerge from this study. First, is the finding that Obama does not subscribe to other people's ideas about the continent. He developed his own understanding of the continent from his experiences. Second, Obama believes that the wellbeing of Africans is fundamentally connected to American politics. Finally, Obama understands African countries' relationships with the United States outside of the narrow realism of war on which virtually all of his presidential predecessors have relied in their dealings with African nations in the past. In that regard, the study shows that Obama's discourse about the continent marks significant a break in the history of U.S.-Africa relations.
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