TY - JOUR
T1 - The satiric vision of politics
T2 - Ethics, interests and disorders
AU - Hall, Ian
PY - 2014/3
Y1 - 2014/3
N2 - In The Tragic Vision of Politics (Lebow, 2003), Richard Ned Lebow argues that a 'tragic understanding of the political' provides the best ontological and epistemological foundations for a theory of International Relations. This article challenges that claim. It argues that other literary modes of representing social life can offer equally strong bases for international theories. To that end, it examines the 'satirical vision of politics' with reference to satirists as diverse as Aristophanes and Erasmus. It concludes that satire can provide just as good a form of political education as tragedy and just as robust a foundation for the kind of theory Lebow prefers.
AB - In The Tragic Vision of Politics (Lebow, 2003), Richard Ned Lebow argues that a 'tragic understanding of the political' provides the best ontological and epistemological foundations for a theory of International Relations. This article challenges that claim. It argues that other literary modes of representing social life can offer equally strong bases for international theories. To that end, it examines the 'satirical vision of politics' with reference to satirists as diverse as Aristophanes and Erasmus. It concludes that satire can provide just as good a form of political education as tragedy and just as robust a foundation for the kind of theory Lebow prefers.
KW - International Relations theory
KW - political realism
KW - satire
KW - tragedy
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84897804656&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1177/1354066112445187
DO - 10.1177/1354066112445187
M3 - Article
SN - 1354-0661
VL - 20
SP - 217
EP - 236
JO - European Journal of International Relations
JF - European Journal of International Relations
IS - 1
ER -