The return of the theorists : dialogues with great thinkers in international relations için kapak resmi
Başlık:
The return of the theorists : dialogues with great thinkers in international relations
Yazar:
Lebow, Richard Ned, editor.
ISBN:
9781349577880
Fiziksel Tanımlama:
x, 393 pages ; 22 cm
İçerik:
Introduction -- The Editors -- Chapter 1. Homer (c. 850 BCE) -- Richard Ned Lebow -- Chapter 2. Conversations with Confucius (551-479 BCE) -- Pichamon Yeophantong -- Chapter 3. Lao Zi (6th-5th century BCE?): Dao of International Politics -- Chen Yudan -- Chapter 4. Thucydides (c.460 -- c. 395 BCE): A Theorist for All Time -- Richard Ned Lebow -- Chapter 5. Discussing War with Plato (429 -- 347 BCE) -- Christopher Coker -- Chapter 6. Aristotle (384 -- 322 BCE): The Philosopher and the Discipline -- Anthony F Lang, Jr. -- Chapter 7. Two Realisms of Niccolò Machiavelli (1469 -- 1527) -- Erica Benner -- Chapter 8. Thomas Hobbes (1588 -- 1679) -- Michael C. Williams -- Chapter 9. An Interview with John Locke (1632-1704) -- Beate Jahn -- Chapter 10. Two Days in the Life of 'Dave' Hume (1711 -- 1776) -- Hidemi Suganami -- Chapter 11. The Dangers of Dependence: Sultan's Conversation with his master Jean-Jacques Rousseau (1712-1778) -- David Boucher -- Chapter 12. Immanuel Kant (1724 -1804): A little Kantian "Schwaermerei" -- Friedrich Kratochwil -- Chapter 13. A Fine Bromance: Immanuel Kant (1724 -- 1804) and Niccolò Machiavelli (1469 -- 1527) -- Seán Molloy -- Chapter 14. G.W.F. Hegel (1770 -1831) and international relations -- Richard Beardsworth -- Chapter 15. A Brief Encounter with Major-General Carl von Clausewitz (1780 -- 1831) -- Jan Willem Honig -- Chapter 16. A Conversation with Karl Marx (1818 -- 1883) on why there is no Socialism in the United States -- Joshua Simon -- Chapter 17. Friedrich Nietzsche (1844 -- 1900) -- Tracy B. Strong -- Chapter 18. Émile Durkheim (1858 -- 1917) -- Bertrand Badie -- Chapter 19. Theory Talk #-100: John Dewey (1859 -- 1952) on the Horror of Making his Poetry Public -- Christian Bueger & Peer Schouten -- Chapter 20. Max Weber (1864 -- 1920) -- Richard Ned Lebow -- Chapter 21. The Republic of Norman Angell (1872 -- 1967): A Dialogue (with apologies to Plato) -- Lucian Ashworth -- Chapter 22. Functionalism in Uncommon Places: Electrifying the Hades with David Mitrany (1888 -- 1975) -- Jens Steffek -- Chapter 23. Dialogue with Arnold Wolfers (1892 -- 1968) -- James W. Davis -- Chapter 24. E.H. Carr (1892 -- 1982) -- Mick Cox -- Chapter 25. Modernity, Technology and Global Security: A Conversation with Lewis Mumford (1895-1990) -- Rens van Munster & Casper Sylvest -- Chapter 26. More Fragments of an Intellectual Biography: Hans J. Morgenthau (1904-1980) -- William E. Scheuerman -- Chapter 27. The return of the spectateur engagé: Interview with Raymond Aron (1905 -- 1983) -- Ariane Chebel d'Appollonia -- Chapter 28. Hannah Arendt (1906 -- 1975) -- Kimberly Huntchings -- Chapter 29. Interview with John Herz (1908 -- 2005) -- Andrew Lawrence -- Chapter 30. Interview with Charles P. Kindleberger (1910 -- 2003), The Reputed Progenitor of Hegemonic Stability Theory -- Simon Reich -- Chapter 31. Karl Deutsch (1912 -- 1992) Interviewed -- Andrei Markovits -- Chapter 32. International Theory beyond the Three Traditions: A Student's Conversation with Martin Wight (1913 -- 1972) -- Ian Hall -- Chapter 33. John Rawls (1921 -- 2002) -- Huw L. Williams -- Chapter 34. The Spirit of Susan Strange (1923-1998) -- Louis Pauly -- Chapter 35. Questioning Kenneth N. Waltz (1924 -- 2013) -- Hidemi Suganami and Adam Humphreys -- Chapter 36. Frantz Fanon (1925-1961) -- Rita Abrahamsen -- Chapter 37. Deep hanging out with Michel Foucault (1926-1984) -- Iver Neumann -- Chapter 38. Interviewing Pierre Bourdieu (1930 -- 2002) about Pierre Bourdieu and International Relations -- Anna Leander -- Chapter 39. Hedley Bull (1932 -- 1985) -- Robert Ayson -- Chapter 40. Jean Bethke Elshtain (1941 -- 2013): A Woman's Refuge, Baghdad, Summer 2015 -- Caroline Kennedy-Pipe -- Conclusions -- The Editors -- Index. .-
Özet:
Contemporary International Relations is as much a conversation between the living and the dead as it is among the living. Its debates are thoroughly rooted in and shaped by the thought of many bygone minds, both ancient and modern. With this in mind, The Return of the Theorists presents forty imagined dialogues with foundational theorists. They run the gamut from Homer and Confucius to Hedley Bull and Jean Bethke Elshtain, and span almost three millennia of human history, comprising representatives of a variety of cultures. The interviewers consist of more than forty international relations scholars and political theorists. They too cut across cultures, continents and almost three generations, and each is an expert on the work of the thinker invited. The Return of the Theorists will be of interest to anyone who has tried to enter the mind of bygone thinkers in political thought and International Relations. "Certainly not a possession for all time"--Thucydides "As Prometheus, having stolen fire from heaven, begins to build houses and to settle upon the earth, so philosophy, expanded to be the whole world, turns against the world of appearance. The same now with international relations theory." - Karl Marx "This volume nicely demonstrates that our whole social environment is filled with forces that really exist only in our own minds." - Durkheim "The contributors offer yet more evidence that thoughts are the shadows of our feelings -- always darker, emptier and simpler." - Nietzsche "Crime, punishment - and The Return of the Theorists. (Read chapter 37.)" - Michel Foucault *As readers have surely recognized, these endorsements are fictional.
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Kitap EKOBKN0008927 327.101 RET 2016
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