Before the West
The Rise and Fall of Eastern World Orders
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Published:3rd Mar '22
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
This hardback is available in another edition too:
- Paperback£30.99(9781108971676)
This book offers a comprehensive history of international relations in 'the East,' challenging traditional narratives and rethinking key concepts like sovereignty and decline.
In Before the West, the author provides a thorough exploration of international relations in regions commonly referred to as 'the East.' This includes East Asia, Central Asia, Eurasia (Russia), the Middle East, and South Asia. The narrative challenges traditional historical perspectives that often center around the rise of Western powers and the subsequent decline of Eastern regions. By examining these histories, the author invites readers to reconsider the foundational concepts of sovereignty and international order, suggesting that Asia should not merely be viewed as a counterpart to Europe, but as a distinct space with its own unique sociopolitical dynamics.
The book poses thought-provoking questions about how we understand historical narratives. What if we approached the history of international relations in 'the East' without the preconceived notions of decline? Before the West encourages a re-evaluation of how we perceive Asia and its historical significance, emphasizing that it has its own set of influences and developments that shape its international relations. This fresh perspective allows for a more nuanced understanding of the region's past and present.
Zarakol's work is groundbreaking in its ambition, as it weaves together a grand narrative that connects various world orders originating from the Mongol Empire. By doing so, Before the West not only chronicles the history of international relations but also redefines key concepts within the field, such as order-making and decline, ultimately enriching our understanding of global history.
'Zarakol's Before the West successfully challenges Eurocentrism not by running into its opposite, Sinocentrism, but by examining Asia and its interconnectedness to the rest of Eurasia. Against Sinocentric works that treat Mongols as 'barbarians', the author puts the Mongol empire at the center of analysis and underscores the high degree of centralization in the Chinggisid sovereignty model. Zarakol vividly demonstrates how 'Asia was first made whole' by Genghis Khan's world conquest. She makes the provocative argument that the supposedly Chinese Ming emperors who overthrew the Mongol Yuan dynasty were in fact 'Chinggisid sovereigns', along with the contemporary Timurids in West Asia. This book is a gem in the genre of Global IR and macro-historical comparison.' Victoria Hui, Associate Professor, Department of Political Science, University of Notre Dame
'In this imaginative and iconoclastic book, Ayşe Zarakol turns some major received wisdoms of academic international relations on their head. Well before the modern world order was shaped by a rising West, the great empires of the East had formed world orders of their own, equally based on territorial sovereignty and universalistic in their aspirations. Charting the historical trajectories of these orders across five centuries, Zarakol encourages us to revise our standard accounts of the international system and especially those of the rise and decline of world orders. As such, this book is an invaluable contribution to the study of international relations in a global context.' Jens Bartelson, Lund University
'Before the West constitutes a tour de force. Ayşe Zarakol brilliantly reorients the Eurocentric focus in international relations scholarship by studying relations between Asian actors in their own right, rather than as derivative of European–Asian interaction. She creatively highlights the influence of the Chinggisid conceptualisations of sovereignty and world order. In so doing, Zarakol demonstrates that we need to focus on the intersubjective understanding of the world order in which those powers are embedded, rather than merely understand the rise and decline of great powers in material terms.' Hendrik Spruyt, Northwestern University
'“Brilliant” and “original” don't begin to do justice to Zarakol's book. After reading her reconstitution of the Mongol political order and its influence, you will never look at China, Russia or the political structure of Asia the same way again. European history too, especially the Habsburg empire, appears in a new light. Zarakol shows how much of world history, and even our modern age, was shaped by the Mongols' pattern of highly centralised, aristocratic sovereignty joined to millennial destiny. The breadth and ambition of this book are staggering. A must-read for global history.' Jack A. Goldstone, George Mason University
'In Before the West, Ayşe Zarakol provides a brilliant and illuminating macro-history of the rise and fall of Eastern world orders that forcefully challenges the conventional history of international relations. In addition to making a persuasive case to separate the rise and decline of the great powers from the rise and decline of world orders, Ayşe Zarakol provides a masterful explanation of the “decline of the East”. This compelling work that blends history and international relations theory is bound to make you see contemporary issues related to order, rise and decline in new light.' Manjeet S. Pardesi, Victoria University of Wellington
'This ingenious book does for IR what Marshall Hodgson did for world economic history. By avoiding Western teleology, Ayşe Zarakol brilliantly reveals the world of “international” relations that existed before the world of Westphalian Europe, but which has for so long been hidden behind the wall of Eurocentrism. Accordingly, the book provides a compelling example of how historical IR can tell us new things about the fundamentals of world politics.' John M. Hobson FBA, University of Sheffield
'… a salient contribution to our multipolar world's conceptual toolkit.' Shaj Mathew, Critical Inquiry
'… [an] outstanding work, which introduces Western IR scholars to various significant, yet unfamiliar, empires that directed the history of Eurasian international relations.' Zheng Chen, China International Strategy Review
ISBN: 9781108838603
Dimensions: 235mm x 158mm x 23mm
Weight: 610g
300 pages