An Appeal to the World - (Creolizing the Canon) by Alex Haskins (Hardcover)
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Highlights
- An Appeal to the World: Creolizing Domination in the Political Thought of Montesquieu, Fukuzawa, and Du Bois reconstructs how three distinguished political philosophers challenged transnational domination-namely, forms of arbitrary political and economic control across national borders-through distinct, but comparable, philosophical frameworks geared toward a range of global contexts.
- About the Author: Alex Haskins is assistant professor of politics and international relations at Wheaton College.
- 232 Pages
- Philosophy, Political
- Series Name: Creolizing the Canon
Description
About the Book
This book reconstructs how three political philosophers challenged transnational domination through distinct, but comparable, philosophical frameworks with global contexts. Challenging frameworks of political and economic control, Haskins reveals how the work of each examined author has implications for contemporary international organizations.Book Synopsis
An Appeal to the World: Creolizing Domination in the Political Thought of Montesquieu, Fukuzawa, and Du Bois reconstructs how three distinguished political philosophers challenged transnational domination-namely, forms of arbitrary political and economic control across national borders-through distinct, but comparable, philosophical frameworks geared toward a range of global contexts.
For Montesquieu, despotic formulations remain the most alarming kinds of domination but can effectively be resisted through an emphasis on contextualized forms of moderation. Fukuzawa's key concern with domination centers on dependent relations but can be resisted through an emphasis on contextualized forms of independence. Du Bois, for his part, remains primarily concerned with domination as it manifests in discriminatory ontologies, and he challenges these through an emphasis on contextualized solidarity and self-determination.
An Appeal to the World creolizes these authors' reflections through three cases on Egypt, China, and England that feature across each author's writing, highlighting both shortcomings of each thinker's conclusions and how, collectively, they offer a more circumspect approach to resisting transnational domination. In so doing, An Appeal to the World challenges and seeks to conceptually and methodologically move beyond transnational good governance and developed/developing frameworks that continue to bedevil international organizations in the present.
About the Author
Alex Haskins is assistant professor of politics and international relations at Wheaton College. His teaching and research interests in the field of political theory have been sustained over the years by a deeply felt need to grapple with the complex histories of imperialism, colonialism, and Christianity in the modern world-particularly in Africa, the Americas, and Asia-and what implications such grappling might have for global justice, international law, development, multiculturalism, and global missions.