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Women's International Thought: A New History is the first cross-disciplinary history of women's international thought. Bringing together some of the foremost historians and scholars of international relations working today, this book recovers and analyses the path-breaking work of eighteen leading thinkers of international politics from the early to mid-twentieth century. Recovering and analyzing this important work, the essays offer revisionist accounts of IR's intellectual and disciplinary history and expand the locations, genres, and practices of international thinking. Systematically structured, and focusing in particular on Black diasporic, Anglo-American, and European historical women, it does more than 'add women' to the existing intellectual and disciplinary histories from which they were erased. Instead, it raises fundamental questions about which kinds of subjects and what kind of thinking constitutes international thought, opening new vistas to scholars and students of international history and theory, intellectual history and women's and gender studies.
Women wrote on the myriad problems of international relations, generating a multiplicity of forms of international thought. The introductory chapter to this edited volume, the first book-length attempt to recover and analyze the intellectual work of a range of historical women thinkers, asks how we might think systematically about this intellectual history. What assumptions about these categories – women, international, and thought – should we make? The contrast between the presence of historical women in the multiple forms and sites of international thought and their absence in the relevant intellectual and disciplinary histories suggests that it is high time to begin confronting these questions. This book retrieves as well as analyzes women’s international thinking, and broadens and deepens what are currently taken to be the accepted practices and locations of international thought in both History and International Relations.
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