International relations in uncommon places : indigeneity, cosmology, and the limits of international theory

著者

    • Beier, J. Marshall

書誌事項

International relations in uncommon places : indigeneity, cosmology, and the limits of international theory

J. Marshall Beier

Palgrave Macmillan, 2009, c2005

  • : [pbk]

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注記

Originally published: New York: Basingstoke, 2005

Includes bibliographical references (p. [225]-242) and index

内容説明・目次

内容説明

The central claim developed in this book is that disciplinary International Relations (IR) is identifiable as both an advanced colonial practice and a postcolonial subject. The starting problematic here issues from disciplinary IR's relative dearth of attention to indigenous peoples, their knowledges, and the distinctive ways of knowing that underwrite them. The book begins by exploring how IR has internalized many of the enabling narratives of colonialism in the Americas, evinced most tellingly in its failure to take notice of indigenous peoples. More fundamentally, IR is read as a conduit for what the author terms the 'hegemonologue' of the dominating society: a knowing hegemonic Western voice that, owing to its universalist pretensions, speaks its knowledge to the exclusion of all others.

目次

Revealing the Hegemonologue Ethnography and Disciplinary IR Ethnography, Ethics, and Advanced Colonialism Lakota Lifeways: Continuity and Change in a Colonial Encounter Advanced Colonialism and Pop-Culture Treatments of Indigenous North Americans Travelogues: The Ethnographic Foundations of Orthodox International Theory Emancipatory Violences Recovering International Relations from Colonial Practice

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