
Sir Norman Angell, pioneer both of international relations as a distinct discipline and of the theory of globalization, winner of the Nobel Peace Prize, and one of the twentieth century's leading internationalist campaigners on both sides of the Atlantic, lived the great illusion in three senses. First, his 'life job', as he came to call it, was founded upon and defined by The Great Illusion, a best-seller whose original version appeared in 1909: it perceptively showed how economic interdependence would prevent great powers profiting from war; yet it made other, less felicitous, claims from whose implications he spent decades trying to extricate himself. Second, his magnum opus and all his best work derived, to an extent unusual for a public intellectual, not from abstract thinking but from an eventful and varied life as a jobbing journalist in four countries, a cowboy, land-speculator, and gold-prospector in California, production manager of the continental edition of the Daily Mail, author, lecturer, pig farmer, Labour MP, entrepreneur, and campaigner for collective security. Third, he fostered many an enduring illusion about himself by at various times giving wrongly his age, name, nationality, marital status, key career dates, and core beliefs. By dint of careful detective work, this first biography of Angell reveals the truth about a remarkable life that has hitherto been much misrepresented and misinterpreted.
This biography investigates the complex life and intellectual legacy of Sir Norman Angell, questioning how his personal experiences and self-constructed myths shaped his influential theories on international relations. Martin Ceadel, a scholar of international history, utilizes extensive archival research and detective work to reconcile Angell's public persona as a Nobel Peace Prize winner with the private contradictions of his life. The book argues that Angell's work was deeply rooted in his varied professional background rather than purely academic abstraction, while also exposing the inaccuracies Angell propagated about his own history.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts recognize this work as the definitive biography of Norman Angell, praising the author's meticulous research in correcting long-standing historical misconceptions. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose, which provides a thorough and scholarly examination of Angell's contributions to international relations theory.
Page Count:
464
Publication Date:
2009-01-01
Publisher:
OUP Oxford
ISBN-10:
0191570710
ISBN-13:
9780191570711
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