This volume provides a novel approach to international relations. In the course of fifteen essays, scholars write about how life events brought them to their subject matter. They place their narratives in the larger context of world politics, culture, and history.This book moves the field of International Relations towards greater candidness about how personal narrative influences theoretical articulations. No such volume currently exists in the field of international relations
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This volume provides a novel approach to international relations. In the course of fifteen essays, scholars write about how life events brought them to their subject matter. They place their narratives in the larger context of world politics, culture, and history. This book moves the field of International Relations towards greater candidness about how personal narrative influences theoretical articulations. No such volume currently exists in the field of international relations.
Don't we need to flatten the death rate that results from our differential valuation of human beings? In a curved universe, everyone is both in front of us and behind us, and always within our reach. I want to say that our wealth, our income, and our value accrue to us simply because we are all human beings – parts of a whole. Human beings have a right to life.
The achievements of Elizabeth Dauphinee's (2013) The Politics of Exile are highlighted by means of two juxtapositions. First, Dauphinee's book invites a contrast to novels because it takes the form of a story. Specifically, Dauphinee's portrait of the vilified 'Serbs' is compared with how the Taliban are treated in Khalid Hosseini's The Kite Runner and Nadeem Aslam's The Wasted Vigil. Second, The Politics of Exile is examined as it emerges from Dauphinee's efforts to overcome the limits of her more academic work. The advantages of Dauphinee's approach relative to our standard research are presented along five dimensions: the responsibility of closure, the purpose of narration, the transparency of the message, how the work is shown, and the role of generosity. This article critiques Dauphinee's silence on the purpose of travel. It closes by suggesting what social theory can glean from The Politics of Exile. Social theorists can learn how to theorize more systematically, to weigh the relationship between the form and content in writing more judiciously, and to probe the deeper purposes of our intellectual life-work more fully.
1. Permitted urgency : a prologue / Naeem Inayatullah and Elizabeth Dauphinee -- 2. The reluctant immigrant and modernity / Randolph B. Persaud -- 3. Dissolutions of the self / Veronique Pin-Fat -- 4. Simultaneous translation : finding my core in the periphery / Manuela L. Picq -- 5. The intimate architecture of academia / Paulo Ravecca -- 6. The banality of survival / Aida A. Hozic -- 7. Letters to Yvonne : words and/as worlds / Sam Okoth Opondo -- 8. Your East Africa, my Pacific Northwest : a commercial view of Tanzania from an unfamiliar vantage / Donnell Alexander -- 9. Loss of a loss : Ground Zero, Spring 2014 / Jenny Edkins -- 10. Contradictions / Nicholas Onuf -- 11. "Was will das Weib?" Politics, film, desire / Ruth Halaj Reitan -- 12. What might still sputter forth / Kevin C. Dunn -- 13. auto/bio/graph / Paul Kirby -- 14. The smell of wood : recuperating loss in a country of forgetting / Charmaine Chua -- 15. Immobility, intimacy, movement : translating death, life, and border crossings / Richa Nagar -- 16. Suicide, the only politically worthy act / Dan Oberg -- 17. Dancing modernity : an epilogue / Cory Brown.
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