Full Description
This book questions the critical attitude that is informing the critical histories that have been flourishing since the 'historical turn' in international law. It makes the argument that the 'historical turn' falls short of being radically critical as the abounding critical histories which have come to populate the international literature over the last decades continue to be orchestrated along the very lines set by the linear historical narratives which they seek to question and disrupt, thereby repressing the imagination of international lawyers. It makes the point that the critical histories that have accompanied the 'historical turn' have contributed to the repression of disciplinary imagination just like other linear disciplinary histories. This book argues that the critical histories must move beyond a mere historiographical attitude and promotes radical historical critique in order to unbridle disciplinary imagination.
Contents
The Critical Attitude and the History of International Law
Jean d'Aspremont
Abstract
Keywords
1 Markers, Periodization, Causal Sequencing, effet du réel and the Writing of Historical Narratives
2 The Rise of Disciplinary Histories in International Law
3 The 'Historical Turn' and the Burgeoning of Critical Histories
4 The Continuous Complacency of Contemporary Critical Histories
5 The Impossibility of Critical Historiography and the Idea of Radical Historical Critique
6 Concluding Remarks
Bibliography