The thermonuclear revolution and the politics of imagination: Realist radicalism in political theory and IR
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The thermonuclear revolution and the politics of imagination : Realist radicalism in political theory and IR. / van Munster, Rens; Sylvest, Casper.
In: International Relations, Vol. 32, No. 3, 09.2018, p. 255–274.Research output: Contribution to journal › Journal article › Research › peer-review
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TY - JOUR
T1 - The thermonuclear revolution and the politics of imagination
T2 - Realist radicalism in political theory and IR
AU - van Munster, Rens
AU - Sylvest, Casper
N1 - First Published August 7, 2018
PY - 2018/9
Y1 - 2018/9
N2 - Both within political theory and International Relations (IR), recent scholarship has reflected on the nature and limits of political realism. In this article, we return to the thermonuclear revolution and the debates it spurred about what was real and possible in global politics. We argue that a strand of oppositional and countercultural thinking during this period, which we refer to as realist radicalism, has significant theoretical and practical relevance for current scholarship on political realism. Indeed, debates during the thermonuclear revolution speak to questions about the nature of realism and whether it is possible to develop a realism that is attuned to progressive or emancipatory ambitions. By focusing mainly on two radical American intellectuals - C. Wright Mills and Lewis Mumford - we show how their responses to the thermonuclear, superpower standoff challenged conventional understanding of realism and utopianism. By harnessing the concept of the imagination, they called into question pre-existing conceptions about politics and reality. The contribution of the article is twofold. First, we argue that realist political theory and IR should pay more attention to thinkers that are not conventionally regarded as canonical but whose writings and politics interrogated the limits and potential of political realism. Second, we demonstrate that the work of such public intellectuals and their calls for cultivating the imagination connect directly to current debates about political realism, including its statist bend and its (purported) conservatism.
AB - Both within political theory and International Relations (IR), recent scholarship has reflected on the nature and limits of political realism. In this article, we return to the thermonuclear revolution and the debates it spurred about what was real and possible in global politics. We argue that a strand of oppositional and countercultural thinking during this period, which we refer to as realist radicalism, has significant theoretical and practical relevance for current scholarship on political realism. Indeed, debates during the thermonuclear revolution speak to questions about the nature of realism and whether it is possible to develop a realism that is attuned to progressive or emancipatory ambitions. By focusing mainly on two radical American intellectuals - C. Wright Mills and Lewis Mumford - we show how their responses to the thermonuclear, superpower standoff challenged conventional understanding of realism and utopianism. By harnessing the concept of the imagination, they called into question pre-existing conceptions about politics and reality. The contribution of the article is twofold. First, we argue that realist political theory and IR should pay more attention to thinkers that are not conventionally regarded as canonical but whose writings and politics interrogated the limits and potential of political realism. Second, we demonstrate that the work of such public intellectuals and their calls for cultivating the imagination connect directly to current debates about political realism, including its statist bend and its (purported) conservatism.
U2 - 10.1177/0047117818789746
DO - 10.1177/0047117818789746
M3 - Journal article
VL - 32
SP - 255
EP - 274
JO - International Relations
JF - International Relations
SN - 0047-1178
IS - 3
ER -
ID: 371691313