'Pickering presents [the subject] with concision and clarity...' - Choice 'A first class survey of the field.' - Derek McKiernan, European Journal of Communication '...were I still teaching a final year course on political stereotyping, I would use this book as a key text because it reaches far beyond being simply a review of the social science theorising, offering accessibility to the process of, for example, reading historical advertisements and posters.' - David Dunn, Journal of Contemporary European Studies 'As a study of stereotyping in the politics of representation, and more specifically the representation of national identity, foreign cultures, strangers and race, Pickering's book is excellent. The conceptual confrontations and empirical illustrations definitely deepen our understanding of how stereotyping operates in history and society. The book is informative, rich in examples, theoretically creative and innovative. Pickering shows an impressive scholarship.' - Mats Elkstrom, Journal of Language and Politics 'Pickering's skillful balancing of theory and practice makes the book pleasurable to read. The variety of critical angles is impressive: the author constantly moves between social psychology, cultural history, psychoanalysis, postcolonial theory, and sociology and makes stereotyping part of a bigger story by examining it in the contexts of imperialism, Orientalism, nationalism, and national identity, normality and deviance, as well as race, class, and gender categories. Although Pickering works with a wide scope of reference, he never loses sight of his original intention. Moreover, he manages to convince us that the understanding of stereotypes requires openness to new vistas both in and outside the academic field.' - Hungarian Journal of English and American Studies