E.H. Carr and international relations : a duty to lie
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
E.H. Carr and international relations : a duty to lie
(Cambridge studies in international relations, 61)
Cambridge University Press, 1998
- : hbk
- : pbk
Available at / 52 libraries
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Note
Includes bibliographical references (p. 171-177) and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
E. H. Carr is widely remembered as an influential theorist of international relations. The scourge of inter-war idealists, he became the best-known Briton in a generation of predominantly American political realists. But Carr's realism differed greatly from that of his contemporaries: a vigorous advocate of social and economic planning and friend of the Soviet Union, he stood closer to Lenin than to Morgenthau. In this book Charles Jones makes sense of Carr's distinctive form of realism by examining his rhetoric and the reciprocal relationship between theory and policy-making in his writings. Close attention is paid to the period from 1936, when Carr left the Foreign Office, through his subsequent career as a one-man foreign ministry at Aberystwyth, the Ministry of Information, and above all The Times, culminating in the final frustration of his schemes for continued British world power in 1947.
Table of Contents
- 1. The trouble with Carr
- 2. Before the war
- 3. The twenty years' crisis
- 4. Distinctive war aims
- 5. An active danger
- 6. Carr's debt to Mannheim
- 7. Carr's realism
- 8. Conclusion.
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