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What if They Gave a Crisis and Nobody Came: Interpreting International Crises

(Hardback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

What if They Gave a Crisis and Nobody Came: Interpreting International Crises

Contributors:

By (Author) Ron Hirschbein

ISBN:

9780275960438

Publisher:

Bloomsbury Publishing PLC

Imprint:

Praeger Publishers Inc

Publication Date:

9th December 1997

Country:

United States

Classifications

Readership:

Tertiary Education

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Other Subjects:

Peace studies and conflict resolution

Dewey:

327.73

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Hardback

Number of Pages:

240

Dimensions:

Width 156mm, Height 235mm

Weight:

567g

Description

If wars are too important to be left to the generals, crises are too dangerous to be left exclusively to the social scientists. Humanistic inquiry has not realized its potential for illuminating these wars of words. Crises occur in a realm foreign to prevailing approaches, but familiar to interpretive approaches to politics. Decision-makers are no longer observers of unmistakable threats: they are interpreters of cryptic texts and symbolic performances. Accordingly, analysts (quite unwittingly) have become interpreters of interpretationscrises inquiry occurs in the archives, not the laboratory. Relying upon a hermeneutic approach used to illuminate crises at other times and places, Hirschbein explores the puzzling aspects of defining Kennedy, Nixon, and Kissinger episodes: Why is Kennedy's joust on the brink enshrined as the unforgettable Cuban missile crises, while Nixon and Kissingers' prudent resolution of a comparable threat is all but forgotten This novel account of crises construction, management, and remembrance explores how and why these events were handled so differently, and concludes that it is not world that is the source of our crises, but our interpretation of the world. Questions of crisis construction, management, and remembrance are at the heart of this study. Professor Hirschbein examines why American political figures define an event as a crisisor not. He then analyzes why some crises are managed prudently, while others are not, despite access to comparable information and resources. Lastly, he tries to determine why some crises are enshrined as templates for future confrontation while others quickly fade into oblivion. Hirschbein argues that it is not the world that is the source of our crises, but our ^Iinterpretation^R of the world. Accordingly, he explicates those official interpretations of the world known as international crises. This fascinating comparative study will be of great interest to students, scholars, and other researchers of American diplomacy and Peace Studies.

Reviews

"The research by Professor Hirschbein is a very important step in rectifying this need for new and viable theory to meet the challenges of the contemporary era. His work is especially important in that he breaks out of the restrictive mold that confined studies of international political complexities to political and social science perspectives by expanding his concerns to the humanistic. With this, he leads a groundswell movement that is reconfiguring the face of research today."-C.R. Nordstrom Peace and Conflict Studies Notre Dame University
And in response to the charge that this opens the way to relativism, he offers a succinct discussion of criteria for evaluating contending interpretations (pp. 95-8), which rounds off a chapter that can be strongly recommended to those seeking an introduction to the hermeneutic approach.-The International History Review
"And in response to the charge that this opens the way to relativism, he offers a succinct discussion of criteria for evaluating contending interpretations (pp. 95-8), which rounds off a chapter that can be strongly recommended to those seeking an introduction to the hermeneutic approach."-The International History Review

Author Bio

RON HIRSCHBEIN is Professor of Philosophy and Coordinator of War & Peace Studies at California State University, Chico. He has also served as Visiting Professor at the Institute on Global Conflict & Cooperation at the University of California, San Diego, the Program in Peace & Conflict Studies at the University of California, Berkeley, and at the United Nations University in Austria.

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