The rise of the civilizational state
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Bibliographic Information
The rise of the civilizational state
Polity Press, 2019
- : [hardback]
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Note
Includes bibliographical references (p. 188-217) and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
In recent years culture has become the primary currency of politics - from the identity politics that characterized the 2016 American election to the pushback against Western universalism in much of the non-Western world.
Much less noticed is the rise of a new political entity, the civilizational state. In this pioneering book, the renowned political philosopher Christopher Coker looks in depth at two countries that now claim this title: Xi Jinping's China and Vladimir Putin's Russia. He also discusses the Islamic caliphate, a virtual and aspirational civilizational state that is unlikely to fade despite the recent setbacks suffered by ISIS. The civilizational state, he contends, is an idea whose time has come. For, while civilizations themselves may not clash, civilizational states appear to be set on challenging the rules of the international order that the West takes for granted. China seems anxious to revise them, Russia to break them, while Islamists would like to throw away the rule book altogether. Coker argues that, when seen in the round, these challenges could be enough to give birth to a new post-liberal international order.
Table of Contents
CONTENTS
Preface
Chapter 1 - Liberal Civilization and its Discontents
Chapter 2 - Civilizational Myths
Chapter 3 - Imagining the West
Chapter 4 - Cultural Darwinism
Chapter 5 - The Civilizational-State
Chapter 6 - The Once and Future Caliphate
Chapter 7 - A Post-Liberal world
by "Nielsen BookData"