Fear without Rationality: Emotions in Lithuanian Foreign Policy
Abstract
The paper reflects on the conception of the phenomenon of fear employed in the international relations
theory. A critique of understanding of fear as a rational incentive of conventional international
relations theories paves the way for the notion of fear as an emotion. It is argued that the behaviour
of states in international politics should be explained via their psychological and emotional aspects.
The paper proposes to connect the arising of and experiencing fear with collective memory and
the imagery entrenched in nations’ subconscious. It also proposes to distinguish the two levels of
arising of and experiencing the emotion of fear, namely the attempt to consciously arouse fear
and its nonconscious experience. On the first level, mnemonic-emotive agents consciously activate
collective emotions via the nation’s collective memory. On the second, once the contents/imagery of
the society’s subconscious are activated, the aroused emotions are nonconsciously experienced by the
society. The paper offers a case study from the Lithuanian foreign policy: its relations with Russia.
Discourse analysis of Lithuania–Russia relations, where President Dalia Grybauskaitė plays an
active and important role in discourse formation, suggests that the formation of Lithuanian foreign
policy, with regard to Russia, is affected by the emotion of fear.
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