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Whither the International at the End of IR?

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Whither the International at the End of IR? / Sylvester, Christine.
In: Millennium : Journal of International Studies, Vol. 35, No. 3, 01.09.2007, p. 551-571.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Sylvester, C 2007, 'Whither the International at the End of IR?', Millennium : Journal of International Studies, vol. 35, no. 3, pp. 551-571. https://doi.org/10.1177/03058298070350031101

APA

Sylvester, C. (2007). Whither the International at the End of IR? Millennium : Journal of International Studies, 35(3), 551-571. https://doi.org/10.1177/03058298070350031101

Vancouver

Sylvester C. Whither the International at the End of IR? Millennium : Journal of International Studies. 2007 Sept 1;35(3):551-571. doi: 10.1177/03058298070350031101

Author

Sylvester, Christine. / Whither the International at the End of IR?. In: Millennium : Journal of International Studies. 2007 ; Vol. 35, No. 3. pp. 551-571.

Bibtex

@article{855466b587fb45859bd69262a64eea4b,
title = "Whither the International at the End of IR?",
abstract = "IR today has a far more expansive sense of the international than it had prior to the third debate era. Exciting as this is, the broadening has also resulted in a certain narrowing. We are now an IR of camps that form around, and develop particularistic notions of, the international and its key relations. Camps follow particular personages and texts, often interact minimally with one another, and can be unfamiliar with texts and theories that do not concern them; increasingly, the camps even develop their own journals. Establishing zones of professional distinction that operate in camp-ish modes, the camps of IR render intellectual exception-taking the norm. In some ways, this means that IR is at an end: there is little agreement today on what the field is about. Yet IR lives on with a structure that simultaneously lets more in and misses elements of the international that lie in spaces between camps. Drawing on a range of writings on {"}camps{"} and {"}the end,{"} I characterise IR's structure today and propose a route to an afterlife that juxtaposes fragmented knowledges instead of seeking reconciliation or continuing on with separateness. The idea is to construct IR collages, wherein differences, even seeming incommensurabilities, are put together into compositions that suggest locations and links as yet unexplored.",
author = "Christine Sylvester",
note = "RAE_import_type : Journal article RAE_uoa_type : Politics and International Studies",
year = "2007",
month = sep,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1177/03058298070350031101",
language = "English",
volume = "35",
pages = "551--571",
journal = "Millennium : Journal of International Studies",
issn = "0305-8298",
publisher = "SAGE Publications Ltd",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Whither the International at the End of IR?

AU - Sylvester, Christine

N1 - RAE_import_type : Journal article RAE_uoa_type : Politics and International Studies

PY - 2007/9/1

Y1 - 2007/9/1

N2 - IR today has a far more expansive sense of the international than it had prior to the third debate era. Exciting as this is, the broadening has also resulted in a certain narrowing. We are now an IR of camps that form around, and develop particularistic notions of, the international and its key relations. Camps follow particular personages and texts, often interact minimally with one another, and can be unfamiliar with texts and theories that do not concern them; increasingly, the camps even develop their own journals. Establishing zones of professional distinction that operate in camp-ish modes, the camps of IR render intellectual exception-taking the norm. In some ways, this means that IR is at an end: there is little agreement today on what the field is about. Yet IR lives on with a structure that simultaneously lets more in and misses elements of the international that lie in spaces between camps. Drawing on a range of writings on "camps" and "the end," I characterise IR's structure today and propose a route to an afterlife that juxtaposes fragmented knowledges instead of seeking reconciliation or continuing on with separateness. The idea is to construct IR collages, wherein differences, even seeming incommensurabilities, are put together into compositions that suggest locations and links as yet unexplored.

AB - IR today has a far more expansive sense of the international than it had prior to the third debate era. Exciting as this is, the broadening has also resulted in a certain narrowing. We are now an IR of camps that form around, and develop particularistic notions of, the international and its key relations. Camps follow particular personages and texts, often interact minimally with one another, and can be unfamiliar with texts and theories that do not concern them; increasingly, the camps even develop their own journals. Establishing zones of professional distinction that operate in camp-ish modes, the camps of IR render intellectual exception-taking the norm. In some ways, this means that IR is at an end: there is little agreement today on what the field is about. Yet IR lives on with a structure that simultaneously lets more in and misses elements of the international that lie in spaces between camps. Drawing on a range of writings on "camps" and "the end," I characterise IR's structure today and propose a route to an afterlife that juxtaposes fragmented knowledges instead of seeking reconciliation or continuing on with separateness. The idea is to construct IR collages, wherein differences, even seeming incommensurabilities, are put together into compositions that suggest locations and links as yet unexplored.

U2 - 10.1177/03058298070350031101

DO - 10.1177/03058298070350031101

M3 - Journal article

VL - 35

SP - 551

EP - 571

JO - Millennium : Journal of International Studies

JF - Millennium : Journal of International Studies

SN - 0305-8298

IS - 3

ER -