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E-grāmata: Narrative Global Politics: Theory, History and the Personal in International Relations

4.33/5 (11 ratings by Goodreads)
Edited by , Edited by (Ithaca College, USA)
  • Formāts: 230 pages
  • Sērija : Interventions
  • Izdošanas datums: 01-Jul-2016
  • Izdevniecība: Routledge
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781317294559
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  • Formāts: 230 pages
  • Sērija : Interventions
  • Izdošanas datums: 01-Jul-2016
  • Izdevniecība: Routledge
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781317294559
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This volume seeks to harness the virtual explosion of narrative writing in contemporary academic international politics. It is comprised of an introduction and eighteen short essays that both build upon and diversify the success of the 2010 volume Autobiographical International Relations. In that volume, academics wrote about how life events brought them to their subject matter. They placed their narratives in the larger context of world politics, culture, and history.

This volume asks contributors to explore moments in their academic lives that were generally inexpressible in the standard academic voice and which, in turn, require a different way of writing and knowing. The authors in this collection believe that the costs of fictive distancing have now overrun its benefits and that academic IR has already begun to profit from a different kind of writing – a style that retrieves the "I" and explicitly demonstrates its presence both within the world and within academic writing. By working within the overlap between theory, history, and autobiography, these essays aim to increase the clarity, urgency, and meaningfulness of academic work.

Highlighting the autoethnographic and autobiographic turn in critical international relations, this work will be of great interest to students and scholars in international relations, ir theory and global politics.

Recenzijas

'Scholars, blessed with the luxury of time to think and razor sharp minds with which to do it, often fail to deliver insights in a manner allowing critical ideas to come alive. Inayatullah and Dauphine have crystalized a new direction in academic writing. This turn is far from simply stylistic, and begins the process of resuscitating the important cultural beast that is academic writing. In fact, as we see, they allow that beast to dance with grace and clarity.' - Jane-Marie Law, Associate Professor, Religious Studies and Asian Studies, Cornell University, USA

'Narrative Global Politics offers a series of poignant and insightful essays that seek to locate the authors own bodies and experiences in their work and in their world. These essays offer a glimpse of how we might begin to understand the web of identity, relationships, place, and power in which we exist. Both tender and discerning, Narrative Global Politics vividly explores the scholarly and personal work of "being in relation.' - Catherine Taylor, Associate Professor, Ithaca College, USA

'Narrative Global Politics is an intervention in international relations that gives new meaning to the feminist mantra the personal is political. In a series of absorbing and often poignant essays, scholars and artists write about themselves and global politics. In the process, they simultaneously work toward and make a compelling case for new ways of understanding and acting on the self and the world.' - Lori Leonard, Associate Professor, Development Sociology, Cornell University, USA

'This is global politics rendered at its riveting best, a distinct art form incessantly peeling layers of the political. The hackneyed is out and a whole new aesthetic inaugurated.' - Siddharth Mallavarapu, Associate Professor & Chairperson, Department of International Relations, South Asian University

'Narrative Global Politics fills an important niche in the complex economy of (academic) desire. It not only stages new and illuminating encounters with others and ourselves, but also allows us to dive deeper into the narrative making of the social and the self, and its inexhaustible mystery.' - Erzsebet Strausz, Teaching fellow, Department of Politics and International Studies, University of Warwickm UK

List of figures
xi
Notes on contributors xiii
Acknowledgements xvii
1 Permitted urgency: a prologue
1(4)
Naeem Inayatullah
Elizabeth Dauphinee
2 The reluctant immigrant and modernity
5(20)
Randolph B. Persaud
3 Dissolutions of the self
25(10)
Veronique Pin-Fat
4 Simultaneous translation: finding my core in the periphery
35(16)
Manuela L. Picq
5 The intimate architecture of academia
51(13)
Paulo Ravecca
6 The banality of survival
64(9)
Aida A. Hozic
7 Letters to Yvonne: words and/as worlds
73(14)
Sam Okoth Opondo
8 Your East Africa, my Pacific Northwest: a commercial view of Tanzania from an unfamiliar vantage
87(10)
Donnell Alexander
9 Loss of a loss: Ground Zero, Spring 2014
97(7)
Jenny Edkins
10 Contradictions
104(18)
Nicholas Onuf
11 "Was will das Weib?" Politics, film, desire
122(17)
Ruth Halaj Reitan
12 What might still sputter forth
139(14)
Kevin C. Dunn
13 auto/bio/graph
153(6)
Paul Kirby
14 The smell of wood: recuperating loss in a country of forgetting
159(12)
Charmaine Chua
15 Immobility, intimacy, movement: translating death, life, and border crossings
171(20)
Richa Nagar
16 Suicide, the only politically worthy act
191(9)
Dan Oberg
17 Dancing modernity: an epilogue
200(7)
Cory Brown
Index 207
Naeem Inayatullah is Professor at Ithaca College, USA.

Elizabeth Dauphinee is Professor at York University, Canada.