The Nation-State and Violence: Volume Two of A Contemporary Critique of Historical Materialism

The Nation-State and Violence: Volume Two of A Contemporary Critique of Historical Materialism

by Anthony Giddens (Author)

Synopsis

The social sciences have long been based upon contrasts drawn between the militaristic societies of the past, and the capitalist or a industrial societies of the present. But how valid are such contrasts, given that the current era is one stamped by the impact of war and by the intensive development of sophisticated weaponry? In setting out to address this and similar questions, this book investigates issues that have been substantially neglected by those working in sociology and social theory. Anthony Giddens offers a sociological analysis of the nature of the modern nation-state and its association with the means of waging war. His analysis is connected in a detailed way to problems that have traditionally preoccupied sociologists - the impact of capitalism and industrialism upon social development in the modern period. The result is a theory both of the institutional parameters of modernity and of the nature of international relations. The book is a sequel to the author's much discussed Contemporary Critique of Historical Materialism . The framework of social theory outlined in that work is here elucidated in a systematic and thorough-going fashion. The novel and provocative ideas which the author develops will interest those working in a wide variety of disciplines: sociology, politics, geography and international affairs.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 408
Edition: 1
Publisher: Polity
Published: 24 Sep 1987

ISBN 10: 0745600328
ISBN 13: 9780745600321

Media Reviews
a Giddens is, in the British context, remarkable for more than his industry. He is that rarest of birds, a home reared 'grand theorista , whose aim is nothing less than a reconstruction of the theoretical foundations of social theory ... The Nation State and Violence is the latest, well--argued and researched stage in his attempt to show how the reality we now inhabit has been formed in recent history.a David J. Levy, Times Higher Education Supplement