Limit this search to....

Imagining World Order: Literature and International Law in Early Modern Europe, 1500-1800
Contributor(s): Tang, Chenxi (Author)
ISBN: 1501716913     ISBN-13: 9781501716911
Publisher: Cornell University Press
OUR PRICE:   $63.31  
Product Type: Hardcover - Other Formats
Published: December 2018
Qty:
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Literary Criticism | Modern - 16th Century
- History | Modern - 16th Century
- Law | Legal History
Dewey: 809.933
LCCN: 2018025257
Physical Information: 0.94" H x 6" W x 9" (1.54 lbs) 360 pages
Themes:
- Chronological Period - 16th Century
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:

In early modern Europe, international law emerged as a means of governing relations between rapidly consolidating sovereign states, purporting to establish a normative order for the perilous international world. However, it was intrinsically fragile and uncertain, for sovereign states had no acknowledged common authority that would create, change, apply, and enforce legal norms. In Imagining World Order, Chenxi Tang shows that international world order was as much a literary as a legal matter. To begin with, the poetic imagination contributed to the making of international law. As the discourse of international law coalesced, literary works from romances and tragedies to novels responded to its unfulfilled ambitions and inexorable failures, occasionally affirming it, often contesting it, always uncovering its problems and rehearsing imaginary solutions.

Tang highlights the various modes in which literary texts - some highly canonical (Camões, Shakespeare, Corneille, Lohenstein, and Defoe, among many others), some largely forgotten yet worth rediscovering - engaged with legal thinking in the period from the sixteenth to the eighteenth century. In tracing such engagements, he offers a dual history of international law and European literature. As legal history, the book approaches the development of international law in this period --its so-called classical age--in terms of literary imagination. As literary history, Tang recounts how literature confronted the question of international world order and how, in the process, a set of literary forms common to major European languages (epic, tragedy, romance, novel) evolved.


Contributor Bio(s): Tang, Chenxi: - Chenxi Tang is Professor of German, University of California at Berkeley. He is the author of The Geographic Imagination of Modernity.