
Since the beginning of the twenty-first century, recurring political violence at both state and non-state levels has eroded confidence in the progressively peaceful character of international relations, and has unsettled the parameters of political thought. Frames of peace and frames of war have, throughout Western thought, colored the questions that we ask about politics, the descriptions of the pragmatic and moral alternatives that we face, and the ideas and metaphors that we use at any given moment. These frames, as this book argues, also obscure too much of political life. Gerald M. Mara proposes, instead, a political philosophy that takes both war and peace seriously, and a style of theory committed to questioning rather than closure. He challenges two powerful currents in contemporary political philosophy: the verdict that "premodern" or "metaphysical" texts cannot speak to modern and postmodern societies and the insistence that all forms of political theory be some form of democratic theory. Mara reexamines seminal texts in the history of political theory, from Thucydides to Jacques Derrida, and from Machiavelli to Judith Butler, to examine how frames of reference of war and peace have structured both the writing of these texts, as well as interpretations of them. The result is not a linear history of ideas, but a series of conversations between them, and a democratic justification for moving beyond democratic theory.
How can political philosophy move beyond the binary frames of war and peace to address the complexities of contemporary political life? Gerald M. Mara, a scholar of political theory, argues that Western political thought has been constrained by rigid frameworks that prioritize either war or peace, thereby obscuring the nuanced reality of political existence. By analyzing seminal texts from Thucydides to Derrida, Mara proposes a dialogic approach to political theory that favors ongoing inquiry over definitive closure and challenges the hegemony of contemporary democratic theory.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars and students of political philosophy often identify this work as a rigorous challenge to the limitations of modern democratic theory. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose, which requires a strong foundational knowledge of the history of political thought to fully engage with the author's arguments.
Page Count:
280
Publication Date:
2019-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190903937
ISBN-13:
9780190903930
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