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Becoming International

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When and how did the modern world become an international one? Jens Bartelson, a leading scholar of the history of international thought, provides new answers to this question by analyzing how relations between polities have been conceptualized across different historical contexts from the sixteenth century to the present day. A global intellectual history of the international system, this book challenges the widespread assumption that this system emerged as a result of a transition from empires to states, instead proposing that the international realm is but a continuation of imperial relations by other means. Showing how the international system spread through the creative appropriation of European concepts of nation and state by non-Europeans, Bartelson argues that this system has taken on a life of its own, to the point of becoming an empire in its own right.

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  • Provides the first comprehensive intellectual history of the international system, allowing readers to understand the key aspects of political modernity
  • Revises received views of empires and states, and explores the consequences of nationalism 
  • Delivers a new account of the global spread of the nation-state which will aid understanding of the rise and return of nationalism in international affairs
Author: Bartelson Jens
Publisher: CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS
Pages: 300
ISBN: 9781009400749
Cover: Paperback
Edition Number: 1
Release Year: 2023

1. Making sense of the international
2. Dividing the world
3. Empire and independence c.1776-–c.1825
4. Empire and self-determination c. 1820–c.1919
5. The empire of the international
6. From the international to the global and beyond?.

Jens Bartelson is Professor of Political Science at Lunds Universitet, Sweden. He is the author of Visions of World Community (Cambridge, 2009), The Critique of the State (Cambridge, 2001), A Genealogy of Sovereignty (Cambridge, 1995), as well as of articles in leading journals in international relations, international law, political theory, and sociology.

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