Lexington Books
Pages: 190
Trim: 6⅜ x 9¼
978-0-7391-0666-2 • Hardback • March 2004 • $123.00 • (£95.00)
978-0-7391-2082-8 • Paperback • December 2006 • $51.99 • (£40.00)
Linda Bishai is Assistant Professor of international relations at Towson University in Maryland where she teaches courses on international law, force and aggression, and international relations. Bishai was a research fellow on issues of intervention at the Swedish Institute for International Affairs.
Chapter 1 If at First You Don't Secede: International Relations Theory and Its Shortcomings
Chapter 2 Why the Patient Cannot be Cured
Chapter 3 States Taking Place: History and the Territorialization of Politics
Chapter 4 Begging to Differ: Patriots, Nationalists, Minorities
Chapter 5 Secessionist Performances, Narrating Otherness
Chapter 6 InConclusion: Forgetting and the Theory & Practice of the Self
This is a tightly argued and clearly written work engaging both major currents of thought about state territoriality and sovereignty and empirical materials on a selection of contemporary secessionist movements from around the world. Two features are outstanding: the contribution made to understanding the connection between territory and political identity, and the original analysis, of secessionist movements in terms of the 'performance' of territory/identity claims.
— John Agnew, UCLA; author of Place and Politics in Modern Italy
This work will best be appreciated by those conversant in liberal and postmodern political theory from John Rawles to Charles Taylor, Will Kymlicka, William Connolly, and those supportive of a constitutive or constructivist IR theoretical approach. Recommended.
— Choice Reviews
Bishai offers an impressive critique of the fantasy of timelessness and indivisibility that befell the understanding of territorial statehood, especially in the discipline of international relations. Through an acute historical and philosophical analysis of the secession phenomenon, she issues an important and timely challenge: to forget 'oneself' in order to make possible 'other selves', to enable a politics of identity which can accommodate overlapping loyalties, a politics not embedded in unreflective homogenization, nation-building and territoriality schemes.
— Costas Constantinou, Keele University, International Relations
Drawing on Nietzschean insights, Bishai demonstrates the historical newness and philosophical impossibility of secession, and devastates extant ethical and causal scholarship on the issue. Students of IR are forced to pay long overdue interest to a topic that should have been central to the discipline all along.
— Iver Neumann, Norwegian Institute of International Affairs