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Autobiographical International Relations: I, IR [Hardback]

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Edited by (Ithaca College, USA)
  • Formāts: Hardback, 230 pages, height x width: 234x156 mm, weight: 590 g
  • Sērija : Interventions
  • Izdošanas datums: 26-Nov-2010
  • Izdevniecība: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 0415781426
  • ISBN-13: 9780415781428
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  • Cena: 191,26 €
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  • Bibliotēkām
  • Formāts: Hardback, 230 pages, height x width: 234x156 mm, weight: 590 g
  • Sērija : Interventions
  • Izdošanas datums: 26-Nov-2010
  • Izdevniecība: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 0415781426
  • ISBN-13: 9780415781428
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
This volume provides a novel approach to international relations. In the course of fifteen essays, scholars write about how life events brought them to their subject matter. They place their narratives in the larger context of world politics, culture, and history.

Autobiographical International Relations believes that the fictive distancing associated with academic prose creates disaffection in both readers and writers. In contrast, these essays demonstrate how to reengage the "I" while simultaneously sustaining theoretical precision and historical awareness. Authors highlight their motives, their desires, and their wounds. By connecting their theoretical and practical engagements with their needs and wounds, and by working within the overlap between theory, history, and autobiography, these essays aim to increase the clarity, urgency, and meaningfulness of academic work.

These essays are autobiographical, but focused on the academic aspect of authors lives. Specifically, they are set within the domain of international relations/global politics. They are theoretical, but geared to demonstrate that theoretical decisions emerge from theorists needs and wounds. Theoretical precision, rather than being explicitly deduced, is instead immanent to the autobiographical and the historical/cultural narrative each author portrays. And, these essays are framed in historical/cultural terms, but seek to bind together theory, history, culture, and the personal into a differentiated and vibrant whole.

This book moves the field of International Relations towards greater candidness about how personal narrative influences theoretical articulations. No such volume currently exists in the field of international relations.
List of contributors
xi
Acknowledgments xiv
Falling and flying: an introduction
1(12)
Naeem Inayatullah
1 Accidental scholarship and the myth of objectivity
13(6)
Stephen Chan
2 Objects among objects
19(12)
Jenny Edkins
3 Stammers between silence and speech
31(10)
Narendran Kumarakulasingam
4 Scenes of obscenity: the meaning of America under epistemic and military violence
41(15)
Khadija F. El Alaoui
5 I, the double soldier: an autobiographic case-study on the pitfalls of dual citizenship
56(9)
Rainer Hulsse
6 Weakness leaving my body: an essay on the interpersonal relations of international politics
65(13)
Jacob L. Stump
7 Waiting for the revolution: a foreigner's narrative
78(15)
Alina Sajed
8 Am I not that? at the feet of elders
93(10)
Sara-Maria Sorentino
9 Listening for the elsewhere and the not-yet: academic labor as a matter of ethical witness
103(15)
Lori Amy
10 To realize you're creolized: white flight, black culture, hybridity
118(18)
Joel Dinerstein
11 Goodbye nostalgia! in memory of a country that never existed as such
136(16)
Wanda Vrasti
12 Shaping walls: moving through Lanka's forts
152(9)
Nethra Samarawickrema
13 Three stories: a way of being in the world
161(12)
Patrick Thaddeus Jackson
14 G(r)azing the fields of IR: romping buffaloes, festive villagers
173(14)
Quynh Pham
Himadeep Muppidi
15 The sound of conversation
187(17)
Sorayya Khan
Cosmography recapitulates biography: an epilogue
196(8)
Peter Mandaville
Index 204
Ithaca College, USA