ABSTRACT

A cutting-edge contribution to the aesthetic turn in international relations scholarship, this book exposes the role of poetic techniques in constituting the reality of international politics. It has two symmetrical goals: to illuminate the nonempirical fictions of factual international relations literature, and to highlight the real factual inspirations and implications of contemporary international relations fiction.

Employing narrative theory developed by Hayden White, the author examines factual and fictional accounts of world affairs ranging from the anarchy narrative, central to mainstream international relations research, to novels by Don DeLillo and Milan Kundera. Chapters analyzing factual literature flesh out its unacknowledged inventions, while those dedicated to fiction explain its political roots and agenda. Throughout, the distinction between factual and fictional representations of international relations breaks down. Social-scientific narratives emerge as exercises in rhetoric: the art and politics of persuasion through language. Artistic narratives surface as real pedagogical lessons and exercises in political activism.

The volume challenges the autonomy of academic international relations as an exclusive purveyor of serious knowledge about world affairs and calls for active engagement with literary art. It will be of interest to scholars of International Relations, Political Theory, Historiography, Cultural Theory, and Literary Studies and Criticism.

chapter |17 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|34 pages

Narrative Theory

The Role of Stories in the Representation of Reality

chapter 2|35 pages

The Story of Anarchy

The Poetic Core of Scientific International Relations

chapter 3|33 pages

The Fictions of E. H. Carr’s Realism

Dead Theorist as a Literary Artifact

chapter 4|39 pages

Bin Laden Meets Bill Lawton

The Politics of Don DeLillo’s Poetic Representation of 9/11

chapter 5|33 pages

The End of History as an April Fool’s Joke

Milan Kundera’s Literary Critique of Western Liberalism after 1989

chapter |7 pages

Conclusion