附註:Includes bibliographical references (pages 287-298) and index.
Introduction: Toward an identity turn? -- Theorizing Identity -- Chapter Two: Sources of Order ; What is International Order? ; Sources and Factors ; Identity ; Order in Crisis -- Chapter Three: The Suez Puzzle ; Recognizing We-ness ; The Special Relationship ; The Suez Crisis ; (Not) Understanding Nonviolence -- Chapter Four: Forcing Order ; Language-Power ; Representational Force ; Bargaining and Arguing ; Terror and Exile ; Agency, Rationality, and the Uses of Tolerance -- Forcing Anglo-American Order -- Chapter Five: Demagnetization ; Nasser's Unsettling ; Getting to Force ; Using Force ; After Force -- Chapter Six: Dissolution ; Narrating American Betrayal -- Narrating British Bellicosity ; Specialness Dissolved -- Chapter Seven: Re-Production ; The East/West and Lion/Eagle Problem ; The American Campaign ; The British Campaign ; The Fastened We -- Conclusion -- Chapter Eight: Re-Turn to Identity ; In Theory ; In History ; In Practice ; Conclusion: Turn to Ethics.
摘要:How do states sustain international order during crises? Drawing on the political philosophy of Lyotard and through an empirical examination of the Anglo-American international order during the 1956 Suez Crisis, Bially Mattern demonstrates that states can (and do) use representational force--a forceful but non-physical form of power exercised through language--to stabilize international identity and in turn international order.