In:Discourses of War and Peace: 21st century perspectives
Edited by Cornelia Ilie
[Pragmatics & Beyond New Series 355] 2026
► pp. 30–62
Still-not-yet
Perpetual war and the futurity of peace
This content is being prepared for publication; it may be subject to changes.
Abstract
As numerous scholars have documented, the United States has had an active military presence around
the globe since the end of World War II which has enabled it to intervene in numerous countries and regions. It is
within this context that I examine how peace has been conceptualized in the State of the Union
addresses delivered by postwar US presidents. Grounded in a Systemic Functional Linguistic framework, my analysis
reveals that peace is conceptualized primarily through aspirational, goal-oriented language which
renders it as a potential condition that could/might/will be realized at some future moment. The futurity of peace is
conveyed through a range of linguistic and discursive features which place peace at a remove from the present moment.
The temporal deferral of peace, I argue, suggests that rather than pursuing a Kantian “perpetual peace” postwar US
presidents have proposed actions and policies oriented to a perpetual quest for peace.
Article outline
- 1.Overview
- 2.Perpetual war for perpetual peace
- 3.Data, analytic framework, and method
- 4.Analysis
- 4.1Realized peace
- 4.1.1Peace as circumstantial element
- At peace
- Peace in
- 4.1.2Peace as participant
- 4.1.1Peace as circumstantial element
- 4.2Unrealized peace
- 4.2.1Peace as circumstantial element
- At peace
- Peace in
- To peace
- Of peace
- Cause
- Construct
- Temporal
- For peace
- Battle for peace
- Policy for peace
- Quest for peace
- 4.2.2Peace as participant
- 4.2.3Epithets and collocates of peace
- 4.2.1Peace as circumstantial element
- 4.1Realized peace
- 5.The perpetual quest for peace
Notes References
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