Debating Worlds: Contested Narratives of Global Modernity and World Order

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By the last decade of the twentieth century, the great questions of modernity seemed to be answered. With the collapse of the Soviet Union and global communism, the liberal democratic capitalist project seemed to be the only one left standing, and in the 1990s the "liberal ideal" spread worldwide. Today, of course, this universalistic narrative rings hollow.

The global distribution of power has shifted and the preeminence of the West is receding as new directions for world order emerge. China is rapidly ascending as a peer competitor of the United States, bringing with it a powerful new global narrative of grievance and revision. Political Islam also burst onto the global scene as a multifaceted transnational movement reshaping regional political order and geopolitical alignments. With the rapid advance of climate change, there have arisen new narratives of global endangerment and dystopia. Far from converging, fragmentation and contestation increasingly dominate debates over world order.

In
Debating Worlds, Daniel Deudney, G. John Ikenberry, and Karoline Postel-Vinay have gathered a group of eminent scholars in the field to analyze the various ways in which the West's dominant narrative has waned and a new plurality of narratives has emerged. Each of these narratives combines stories of the past with understandings of the present and attractive visions of the future. Collectively, the contributors map out these narratives, focusing primarily on their key features, origins, and implications for world order. The narratives prominent on the world stage are a volatile mix of components, but they also differ in scope--some are regional and civilizational without global aspirations, while others cast themselves as globally expansive and universally ambitious. Covering the most influential narratives currently shaping world politics, Debating Worlds is an essential volume for all scholars of international relations.

Author(s): Daniel Deudney, G. John Ikenberry, Karoline Postel-Vinay
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Year: 2023

Language: English
Pages: 311
City: New York

Cover
Half-Title
Title
Copyright
Contents
Acknowledgments
List of Contributors
Introduction: Debating Worlds
1. Angloworld Narratives: Race as Global Governance
2. The Rise and Fall of a Global Narrative: The Soviet Challenge to the Western World
3. Pan-Islamic Narratives of the Global Order, 1870–1980
4. The Enduring Dilemma of Japan’s Uniqueness Narratives
5. Writing the Right: Radical Conservative Narratives of Globalization
6. The Chinese Global in the Long Postwar: Narratives of War, Civilization, and Infrastructure since 1945
7. Narrating India in/and the World: Colonial Origins and Postcolonial Contestations
8. Inequality, Development, and Global Distributive Justice
9. The Great Schism: Scientific-.Technological Modernity versus Greenpeace Civilization
Conclusion: Many Worlds and the Coming Narrative Dilemma
Index