From International Relations to Relations International

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Aesthetic Turn
alternative international relations frameworks
Ashis Nandy
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Civil Society
critical introduction
critical pedagogy
decolonial perspectives
Development Studies Courses
Direct Democracy
Disciplinary IR
Double Discourse
East Indies
East Timor
Emancipatory Sociality
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eq_biography-true-stories
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Eurocentrism critique
everyday life studies
Fin De Siglo
global south politics
interdisciplinary analysis
International Relations Theory
interventions
Liberation War
Ministerio Del Poder Popular Para
NGO Movement
Non-violent Resistance
Non-Western International relations
nonEuropean World
People's Diplomacy
People’s Diplomacy
Poetic Geography
Poetic Logic
Postcolonial Theory
Rational Actor Theories
seth
Tamil Nadu
TCP.
Young Man
Zanu PF

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138958494
  • Weight: 330g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 24 Nov 2015
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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This book brings postcolonial critique directly to bear on established ways of theorizing international relations. Its primary concern is with the non-European world and its relations with the North. In advancing an alternative conception of "relations international", the book draws on alternative source material and different forms of writing. It also features short stories, an interview and explores the role of poetics and performance.

The suzerainty of the disciplinary writ is challenged on three primary grounds. Firstly on its Eurocentrism, which leads the discipline to pass lightly over the distinctive life experiences of most of the world’s people. Secondly, on the discipline’s failure to engage in any systematic way with other bodies of knowledge about the international, as for example international political economy, postcolonialism and development. Lastly, it confronts the ‘top down’ nature of the politics of the discipline, and that seldom addresses everyday life.

From squatter towns to the evasions of the poor, from law through to literature, this work raises a number of problems for International relations. It challenges a colonial mindset, de-centres the west and opens the field to new approaches that are far more inter-disciplinary than international relations generally allows. It is a provocative contribution for students and scholars of IR and Postcolonial studies alike.

Phillip Darby is director of the independent Institute of Postcolonial Studies based in Melbourne and is a principal fellow in the School of Social and Political Sciences at the University of Melbourne, Australia.