1st Edition

Cultural Politics in International Relations

By Paul Sheeran Copyright 2001
    224 Pages
    by Routledge

    224 Pages
    by Routledge

    This title was first published in 2001. Questioning the authority of the discipline of international relations, in particular structural realism, to recognize the influence of varied social phenomena on possible outcomes, this book demonstrates how seemingly insignificant acts propagated through music, humour and poetry can disturb official culture and initiate social change. This thought-provoking work is compelling reading for undergraduate and postgraduate students of both international relations and cultural studies alike.

    Contents: Stranger in a strange land; Contested claims: the uncertainty of certainty; Cultural genocide: the dialectic of struggle; The system and the damage done; Alternative/counter-culture: coded change; The meaning of dissent: from grumble to revolution; Emancipation and coded (dis)chord; The intelligentsia; A weak utopia; The politics of unreason; Bibliography; Index.

    Biography

    Paul Sheeran, Dr, School of Social Sciences, University of Winchester, UK

    ’This book is an interesting read that breaks some new ground in its appreciation of the reasons for the end of Communism in the USSR. Sheeran has made good use of interview material and it has placed that material in its historical and political context well. The effect of culture, high or low, on politics is notoriously difficult to measure, which is why it is sometimes claimed that there are few links between the two. So this as a brave and worthwhile attempt to try and demonstrate what is an intuitively demonstrable link. Sheeran makes the point (at some length and with some sophistication) that applied to the Soviet reality it was even more the case that culture could affect politics and was rightly speaking, in a book about rock music, a brick in the wall of Soviet collapse there are some flights of real poetry in his prose.’ Professor Andrew J. Williams, Director of Research, University of Kent at Canterbury, UK ’Sheeran...has presented a clear picture of the role of ideas in the late Soviet system. By doing so, he has helped others in international relations analysis to be aware of the subtle trends in popular culture.’ International Journal on World Peace