Reframing Cultural Diplomacy: The Instrumentalization of Culture under the Soft Power Theory
Author(s) -
Mariano Martín Zamorano
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
culture unbound journal of current cultural research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.256
H-Index - 7
ISSN - 2000-1525
DOI - 10.3384/cu.2000.1525.1608165
Subject(s) - soft power , diplomacy , cognitive reframing , hegemony , persuasion , articulation (sociology) , power (physics) , politics , construct (python library) , culture theory , political science , cultural analysis , cultural hegemony , sociology , hard power , political economy , epistemology , social science , law , social psychology , psychology , philosophy , physics , quantum mechanics , computer science , anthropology , programming language
Although cultural diplomacy has grown in importance in recent years, there is no consensus on its definition. Cultural diplomacy is commonly framed in terms of soft power: the capacity of persuasion and attraction that allows the state to construct hegemony without using coercive methods. In this article, I offer a critical analysis of this theory’s limitations. To shed light on this situation, I provide an historical analysis of cultural diplomacy. Based on this historical analysis and on an extensive desk research, I examine the dominant methodological and conceptual articulation of soft power in cultural diplomacy literature to clarify how the logical framework of soft power favors a specific and restrained conception of these policies, narrowing its understanding and legitimating its economic and political instrumentalization.
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