cover image THE IMPERIAL TENSE: Prospects and Problems of American Empire

THE IMPERIAL TENSE: Prospects and Problems of American Empire

, . . Ivan R. Dee, $28.95 (286pp) ISBN 978-1-56663-533-2

There's a host of issues surrounding the U.S. and what many see as its empire as it pushes to confront terrorism—and this balanced collection of mostly scholarly articles addresses many of them. For the most part, the pieces are nuanced, examining subtleties in a world where the U.S. is the sole global power. There are no epiphanies, but pieces discuss such topics as how the U.S. can both confront authoritarian regimes and promote human rights, how American policy should change in order to prevent a further international backlash and whether the U.S. is doomed to fall, like previous empires. Some of the articles gathered by Bacevich (American Empire) hew to familiar arguments—a few, like journalist Charles Krauthammer, argue unabashedly for American power; others seem stuck in a pompous, crude anti-Americanism, as when John Millbank calls on the West "to abandon our global idolatrous worship of sacralized absolute sovereignty, and the formally neutral market." But these pieces are the exceptions. To the editor's credit, the essays appear to be carefully chosen, with an equal number critical and accepting of America's increasing global power. At their best, they display a measure of wit, as when one essayist writes: "Whatever its fate, America, too, will live on—for its Constitution, its movies, and for having placed the first man on the moon." (Sept. 26)