1. Exchange on Nick Onuf's 'Metaphoricizing Modernity,' Part I--Dangerous Beginnings, Peripheral (Re)Beginnings: A Reconfiguration of Nick Onuf's Constructivism.
- Author
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Lage, Victor Coutinho
- Subjects
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MODERNITY , *CONSTRUCTIVISM (Psychology) , *CONSTRUCTIVISM (Philosophy) , *PAVEMENTS , *INTERNATIONAL relations , *PRACTICAL politics , *THREAD (Textiles) - Abstract
Nick Onuf's constructivism is one of the most important contributions to the field of international relations in what regards the interchange between social and political theories, and philosophy. In this text, I engage with Onuf's body of work taken as a whole. The guiding thread of the problematization I propose is woven through the attention to how Onuf's craft and creative undertaking sets certain beginnings in the construction of his framework, and how setting them has important implications for (the conception of) 'politics'. I would argue that Onuf's conception of politics is sustained on two central beginnings: the conception of humans as 'rational agents' and the framing of what has come to be called 'modernity'. This way, I emphasize what seems to me the most enduring contribution his body of work can provide not only to the field of international relations, but also to contemporary social and political theories more generally. The first section outlines the relation Onuf establishes between rules and rule, while the following two sections deal, in turn, with his conceptions of 'agency' and the 'modern world'. My goal in these first three sections is to reconfigure Onuf's constructivism. The fourth and final section moves ahead, giving a step further - perhaps too far, perhaps too radical -, paving a critical engagement with his work through peripheral (re)begininngs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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