ID | 156100 |
Title Proper | Bridging the gap between the particular and the universal |
Other Title Information | an intervention by Cemil Meriç |
Language | ENG |
Author | Ongur, Hakan Ovunc ; Topal, Omer Faruk |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | This paper investigates whether the Turkish intellectual Cemil Meriç’s metaphor of silent yet peaceful communication among world literature classics on the same bookshelf might be employed in international political theory in contrast to traditional cosmopolitan or communitarian approaches, which favor either the particular or the universal in constructing social actors. Reviewing Meriç’s works and his conceptualizations of umran and irfan, we first inspect the underlying separation between what Meriç calls the processes of nationalism and nationalization. Meriç defines the latter as a form of people’s construction, which curiously echoes Ernesto Laclau’s definition of social articulations among conflicting particularities under a universal signifier. We then attempt to extend Meriç’s approach toward the international in order to transcend the Westphalian tradition in international relations and to reinterpret Andrew Linklater’s normative cosmopolitanism by lifting the prerequisite of dialogue among international actors for peaceful coexistence. |
`In' analytical Note | Turkish Studies Vol. 18, No.4; Dec 2017: p.729-751 |
Journal Source | Turkish Studies 2017-12 18, 4 |
Key Words | Nationalism ; Universalism ; International Political Theory ; Cemil Meriç |