We a good story
Quick delivery in the UK

E. H. Carr: Imperialism, War and Lessons for Post-Colonial IR

About E. H. Carr: Imperialism, War and Lessons for Post-Colonial IR

This book highlights important parallels between Carr and three influential figures in the first wave of post-colonialism¿DuBois, Césaire and Fanon¿on the analysis of imperialism and the causes of war. Specifically, Carr¿s analysis of imperialism and war parallels the first wave post-colonial thinkers in two respects. First, Carr¿s work historically situates imperialism in the context of the social question in Western democracies. Second, Carr¿s work provides an ideology critique to Enlightenment rationalism, which postulates that ¿reason could determine what [are] the universally valid moral laws¿ and thus ¿by the voice of reason men could be persuaded both to save their own immoral souls and to move along the path of political enlightenment and progress¿ (Carr 1984, 22 and 24). Carr¿s ideology critique exposes the Enlightenment¿s pretences of reason and universality as a deceptive plea that legitimates imperialism. These parallels, the book argues, reveal that Carr did not only recognise global hierarchy, but also theorised the role of what Julian Go refers to as the ¿episteme of empire¿¿that is, ¿the meanings and modalities of seeing and knowing that ¿ accompanied empire and made it possible in the first place¿ (Go 2017, 19¿20). Carr¿s IR theory, in short, was much closer to post-colonial thinking than previously appreciated in the discipline.

Show more
  • Language:
  • English
  • ISBN:
  • 9783030993597
  • Binding:
  • Hardback
  • Pages:
  • 193
  • Published:
  • April 25, 2022
  • Edition:
  • 12022
  • Dimensions:
  • 148x210x0 mm.
  • Weight:
  • 393 g.
Delivery: 2-4 weeks
Expected delivery: December 19, 2024

Description of E. H. Carr: Imperialism, War and Lessons for Post-Colonial IR

This book highlights important parallels between Carr and three influential figures in the first wave of post-colonialism¿DuBois, Césaire and Fanon¿on the analysis of imperialism and the causes of war. Specifically, Carr¿s analysis of imperialism and war parallels the first wave post-colonial thinkers in two respects. First, Carr¿s work historically situates imperialism in the context of the social question in Western democracies. Second, Carr¿s work provides an ideology critique to Enlightenment rationalism, which postulates that ¿reason could determine what [are] the universally valid moral laws¿ and thus ¿by the voice of reason men could be persuaded both to save their own immoral souls and to move along the path of political enlightenment and progress¿ (Carr 1984, 22 and 24). Carr¿s ideology critique exposes the Enlightenment¿s pretences of reason and universality as a deceptive plea that legitimates imperialism. These parallels, the book argues, reveal that Carr did not only recognise global hierarchy, but also theorised the role of what Julian Go refers to as the ¿episteme of empire¿¿that is, ¿the meanings and modalities of seeing and knowing that ¿ accompanied empire and made it possible in the first place¿ (Go 2017, 19¿20). Carr¿s IR theory, in short, was much closer to post-colonial thinking than previously appreciated in the discipline.

User ratings of E. H. Carr: Imperialism, War and Lessons for Post-Colonial IR



Find similar books
The book E. H. Carr: Imperialism, War and Lessons for Post-Colonial IR can be found in the following categories:

Join thousands of book lovers

Sign up to our newsletter and receive discounts and inspiration for your next reading experience.