Queer International Relations: Sovereignty, Sexuality and the Will to Knowledge

Awards:   Winner of Winner of the ISA LGBTQA Caucus Book Award Winner of the ISA Yale H. Ferguson Award. Winner of Winner, ISA Yale H. Ferguson Award.
Author:   Cynthia Weber (Professor of International Relations, Professor of International Relations, University of Sussex)
Publisher:   Oxford University Press Inc
ISBN:  

9780199795864


Pages:   264
Publication Date:   18 February 2016
Format:   Paperback
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Queer International Relations: Sovereignty, Sexuality and the Will to Knowledge


Awards

  • Winner of Winner of the ISA LGBTQA Caucus Book Award Winner of the ISA Yale H. Ferguson Award.
  • Winner of Winner, ISA Yale H. Ferguson Award.

Overview

Full Product Details

Author:   Cynthia Weber (Professor of International Relations, Professor of International Relations, University of Sussex)
Publisher:   Oxford University Press Inc
Imprint:   Oxford University Press Inc
Dimensions:   Width: 15.50cm , Height: 2.00cm , Length: 23.40cm
Weight:   0.340kg
ISBN:  

9780199795864


ISBN 10:   019979586
Pages:   264
Publication Date:   18 February 2016
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Undergraduate ,  Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   To order   Availability explained
Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us.

Table of Contents

"Acknowledgments Chapter 1: Sovereignty, Sexuality and the Will to Knowledge Chapter 2: Queer Intellectual Curiosity as IR Method Chapter 3: ""The Perverse Homosexual"" in International Relations: ""The Underdeveloped"" and ""The Un-Developable"" Chapter 4: The Out-of-Place and On-the-Move ""Perverse Homosexual"" in International Relations: ""The Unwanted Im/migrant"" and ""The Terrorist"" Chapter 5: ""The Normal Homosexual"" in International Relations: ""The Gay Rights Holder"" and ""The Gay Patriot"" Chapter 6: ""The Normal and/or Perverse Homosexual"" in International Relations: ""The Euro-visioned Bearded Drag Queen"" Chapter 7: Sovereignty, Sexuality and ""the End of Man"" Notes Bibliography Index"

Reviews

Weber s book stands out because she is able to incorporate key concepts from queer theory into IR using prominent figures and episodes and in this way makes her writing accessible to a broader audience. Furthermore, Weber s engagements...with spatiality, territoriality, and boundaries are refreshing since most scholarship in IR glosses over or ignores the geographic aspects of world politics. -- Geopolitics This book will challenge readers to think sovereignty, sexuality and IR differently, equipping them to interrogate the sexual bases for political categories, institutions, practices and - most importantly - ideas. In an era where LGBT rights are increasingly held up as markers for normal (as opposed to perverse) states, this intervention is welcome indeed. Weber lays to rest the presumptively white, masculine/cisgendered, able, heterosexual vision of sovereign man that underpins so much of what we do as IR scholars. While the book will almost certainly find pride of place in queer IR, and so it should, it is in the insular world of IR theory that it should be most carefully read. -- Critical Studies on Terrorism Cynthia Weber continues to brilliantly and productively disrupt Disciplinary IR by destabilizing what the field holds most dear - 'the delusion of sovereignty.' This boldly conceived and cogently argued text enriches International Relations and Queer Studies and decisively signals the 'arrival' of Queer IR. It's about time; no other scholar could do it so well. --V. Spike Peterson, University of Arizona Such a fascinating book! Cynthia Weber shows us the crooked, messy, anti-normative - and indeed, queer - underpinnings of the field of International Relations in ways never previously imagined. Queer International Relations places ideas about sovereignty, international norms, development, and sexuality onto the agenda unlike every before. I highly recommend this book for students, scholars and practitioners alike. The Field of International Relations will never be the same! -- Amy Lind, Mary Ellen Heintz Professor of Women's, Gender, and Sexuality Studies, University of Cincinnati Yoking theories of sexuality and sovereignty together, Cynthia Weber's new book boldly demonstrates why disciplinary transgression is well worth the risk. Scholars in International Relations, Queer Studies, American Studies, and Global Cultural Studies will find Queer International Relations a valuable resource for understanding contemporary formations of power. --Robyn Wiegman, Duke University This long-overdue investigation of queer studies and international relations uncovers key links between sexuality and sovereignty, power and possibility. From the underdeveloped to the stateless, and from the gay patriot to the deviant terrorist, Queer IR reconsiders an impressive terrain of human rights debates and controversies. --David L. Eng, University of Pennsylvania Cynthia Weber offers a theoretically and empirically engaging approach to queer theory that broadens and deepens our understanding of International Relations. Her rich accounts of the figurations of 'the homosexual' require a reconsideration of some of the standard tropes in the discipline. Her thought-provoking analyses will be of use to all scholars in the discipline, regardless of their theoretical and methodological commitments. --Cameron G. Thies, Arizona State University In this rich account of why queer theory and IR need each other, Cynthia Weber has given us a powerful statement of what Queer IR might become. This is a great banyan tree of a book that has forced a clearing in the jungle that is IR. Thanks to it, queer IR scholars will no longer have to perform the 'anxious labour' of justifying their place in the academy and can get on with the important work of speaking to and of the world. --Rahul Rao, SOAS, University of London Cynthia Weber has nudged, pushed, and lured us all to think more creatively and more candidly about sexuality as a potentially key dynamic shaping political relationships within and between (alleged) nation-states and their officials. --Cynthia Enloe Important and imminently teachable -- Paul Amar, International Studies Quarterly


Cynthia Weber continues to brilliantly and productively disrupt Disciplinary IR by destabilizing what the field holds most dear - 'the delusion of sovereignty.' This boldly conceived and cogently argued text enriches International Relations and Queer Studies and decisively signals the 'arrival' of Queer IR. It's about time; no other scholar could do it so well. - V. Spike Peterson, University of Arizona Such a fascinating book! Cynthia Weber shows us the crooked, messy, anti-normative - and indeed, queer - underpinnings of the field of International Relations in ways never previously imagined. Queer International Relations places ideas about sovereignty, international norms, development, and sexuality onto the agenda unlike every before. I highly recommend this book for students, scholars and practitioners alike. The Field of International Relations will never be the same! - Amy Lind, Mary Ellen Heintz Professor of Women's, Gender, and Sexuality Studies, University of Cincinnati Yoking theories of sexuality and sovereignty together, Cynthia Weber's new book boldly demonstrates why disciplinary transgression is well worth the risk. Scholars in International Relations, Queer Studies, American Studies, and Global Cultural Studies will find Queer International Relations a valuable resource for understanding contemporary formations of power. - Robyn Wiegman, Duke University This long-overdue investigation of queer studies and international relations uncovers key links between sexuality and sovereignty, power and possibility. From the underdeveloped to the stateless, and from the gay patriot to the deviant terrorist, Queer IR reconsiders an impressive terrain of human rights debates and controversies. -David L. Eng, University of Pennsylvania Cynthia Weber offers a theoretically and empirically engaging approach to queer theory that broadens and deepens our understanding of International Relations. Her rich accounts of the figurations of 'the homosexual' require a reconsideration of some of the standard tropes in the discipline. Her thought-provoking analyses will be of use to all scholars in the discipline, regardless of their theoretical and methodological commitments. - Cameron G. Thies, Arizona State University In this rich account of why queer theory and IR need each other, Cynthia Weber has given us a powerful statement of what Queer IR might become. This is a great banyan tree of a book that has forced a clearing in the jungle that is IR. Thanks to it, queer IR scholars will no longer have to perform the 'anxious labour' of justifying their place in the academy and can get on with the important work of speaking to and of the world. - Rahul Rao, SOAS, University of London Cynthia Weber has nudged, pushed, and lured us all to think more creatively and more candidly about sexuality as a potentially key dynamic shaping political relationships within and between (alleged) nation-states and their officials. - Cynthia Enloe Important and imminently teachable. Paul Amar, International Studies Quarterly


Cynthia Weber continues to brilliantly and productively disrupt Disciplinary IR by destabilizing what the field holds most dear - 'the delusion of sovereignty.' This boldly conceived and cogently argued text enriches International Relations and Queer Studies and decisively signals the 'arrival' of Queer IR. It's about time; no other scholar could do it so well. --V. Spike Peterson, University of Arizona Such a fascinating book! Cynthia Weber shows us the crooked, messy, anti-normative - and indeed, queer - underpinnings of the field of International Relations in ways never previously imagined. Queer International Relations places ideas about sovereignty, international norms, development, and sexuality onto the agenda unlike every before. I highly recommend this book for students, scholars and practitioners alike. The Field of International Relations will never be the same! -- Amy Lind, Mary Ellen Heintz Professor of Women's, Gender, and Sexuality Studies, University of Cincinnati Yoking theories of sexuality and sovereignty together, Cynthia Weber's new book boldly demonstrates why disciplinary transgression is well worth the risk. Scholars in International Relations, Queer Studies, American Studies, and Global Cultural Studies will find Queer International Relations a valuable resource for understanding contemporary formations of power. --Robyn Wiegman, Duke University This long-overdue investigation of queer studies and international relations uncovers key links between sexuality and sovereignty, power and possibility. From the underdeveloped to the stateless, and from the gay patriot to the deviant terrorist, Queer IR reconsiders an impressive terrain of human rights debates and controversies. --David L. Eng, University of Pennsylvania Cynthia Weber offers a theoretically and empirically engaging approach to queer theory that broadens and deepens our understanding of International Relations. Her rich accounts of the figurations of 'the homosexual' require a reconsideration of some of the standard tropes in the discipline. Her thought-provoking analyses will be of use to all scholars in the discipline, regardless of their theoretical and methodological commitments. --Cameron G. Thies, Arizona State University In this rich account of why queer theory and IR need each other, Cynthia Weber has given us a powerful statement of what Queer IR might become. This is a great banyan tree of a book that has forced a clearing in the jungle that is IR. Thanks to it, queer IR scholars will no longer have to perform the 'anxious labour' of justifying their place in the academy and can get on with the important work of speaking to and of the world. --Rahul Rao, SOAS, University of London


Important and imminently teachable. * Paul Amar, International Studies Quarterly * Cynthia Weber has nudged, pushed, and lured us all to think more creatively and more candidly about sexuality as a potentially key dynamic shaping political relationships within and between (alleged) nation-states and their officials. * - Cynthia Enloe * In this rich account of why queer theory and IR need each other, Cynthia Weber has given us a powerful statement of what Queer IR might become. This is a great banyan tree of a book that has forced a clearing in the jungle that is IR. Thanks to it, queer IR scholars will no longer have to perform the 'anxious labour' of justifying their place in the academy and can get on with the important work of speaking to and of the world. * - Rahul Rao, SOAS, University of London * Cynthia Weber offers a theoretically and empirically engaging approach to queer theory that broadens and deepens our understanding of International Relations. Her rich accounts of the figurations of 'the homosexual' require a reconsideration of some of the standard tropes in the discipline. Her thought-provoking analyses will be of use to all scholars in the discipline, regardless of their theoretical and methodological commitments. * - Cameron G. Thies, Arizona State University * This long-overdue investigation of queer studies and international relations uncovers key links between sexuality and sovereignty, power and possibility. From the underdeveloped to the stateless, and from the gay patriot to the deviant terrorist, Queer IR reconsiders an impressive terrain of human rights debates and controversies. * -David L. Eng, University of Pennsylvania * Yoking theories of sexuality and sovereignty together, Cynthia Weber's new book boldly demonstrates why disciplinary transgression is well worth the risk. Scholars in International Relations, Queer Studies, American Studies, and Global Cultural Studies will find Queer International Relations a valuable resource for understanding contemporary formations of power. * - Robyn Wiegman, Duke University * Such a fascinating book! Cynthia Weber shows us the crooked, messy, anti-normative - and indeed, queer - underpinnings of the field of International Relations in ways never previously imagined. Queer International Relations places ideas about sovereignty, international norms, development, and sexuality onto the agenda unlike every before. I highly recommend this book for students, scholars and practitioners alike. The Field of International Relations will never be the same! * - Amy Lind, Mary Ellen Heintz Professor of Women's, Gender, and Sexuality Studies, University of Cincinnati * Cynthia Weber continues to brilliantly and productively disrupt Disciplinary IR by destabilizing what the field holds most dear - 'the delusion of sovereignty.' This boldly conceived and cogently argued text enriches International Relations and Queer Studies and decisively signals the 'arrival' of Queer IR. It's about time; no other scholar could do it so well. * - V. Spike Peterson, University of Arizona *


Author Information

Cynthia Weber is Professor of International Relations at the University of Sussex.

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