Synopses & Reviews
Synopsis
This is the first Anglophone volume on emigre scholars' influence on International Relations, uniquely exploring the intellectual development of IR as a discipline and providing a re-reading of some of its almost forgotten founding thinkers.
Synopsis
Introduction 1. Wither the Silence: European migr Scholars and the Genesis of an American Discipline; Felix R sch PART I: MIGR SCHOLARS AND THE PROBLEM OF TRANSLATING KNOWLEDGE 2. People on the Move - Ideas on the Move: Academic Cultures and the Problematic of Translatability; Hartmut Behr and Xander Kirke 3. Translating Max Weber: Exile Attempts to Forge a New Political Science; Peter Breiner PART II: MIGR SCHOLARS AND THE GENESIS OF AMERICAN INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS 4. International Law, migr s and the Foundation of International Relations; Peter M R Stirk 5. 'Professor Kelsen's Amazing Disappearing Act'; William E. Scheuerman 6. 'Has Germany a Political Theory? Is Germany a State?' The Foreign Affairs of Nations in the Political Thought of Franz L. Neumann; David Kettler and Thomas Wheatland 7. From the Berlin Political Studies Institute to Columbia and Yale: Ernst Jaeckh and Arnold Wolfers; Rainer Eisfeld 8. Totalitarian Ideology and Power Conflicts - Waldemar Gurian as International Relations Analyst after the Second World War; Ellen Th mmler 9. "Foreign Policy in the Making" - Carl J. Friedrich's Realism in the Shadow of Weimar Politics; Paul Petzschmann 10. Simone Weil: An Introduction; Helen M. Kinsella PART III: MIGR SCHOLARS AND THEIR HISTORIC-SEMIOTIC NETWORKS IN THE UNITED STATES 11. From International Law to International Relations. migr Scholars in American Political Science and International Relations; Alfons S llner 12. German Jews and American Realism; Richard Ned Lebow ?