Free Shipping to all UK customers for orders over £25.00

0 Total items on my wish-list.

Free Shipping to all UK customers for orders over £25.00

Ryefieldbooks Logo

Ryefield Books

Free Shipping to all UK customers for orders over £25.00

Ryefieldbooks Logo

Ryefield Books

© Copyright Ryefield Books - All Right Reserved
Product Categories
My Shopping Cart
Void image

You shopping cart is empty

You may browse our offerings to locate what you're
searching for, then put it in your shopping cart.

Book cover image

Globalization and War

Usually dispatched within 3 - 5 business days.

In Stock (66)

£ 43.19

Description

War doesn''t just tear nations apart—it brings peoples and places closer together, providing a new lens on globalization. This book offers a fresh perspective on globalization and war, topics rarely considered together. It conceives war as a form of interconnection between home and abroad, and as an occasion for circulation and interchange. It identifies the political and military work required to create and maintain a free-trading world, while critiquing liberal and neoliberal conceptions of the pacific benefits of economic globalization. Speaking from the heart of old and new imperial orders, Tarak Barkawi exposes the Eurocentric limitations of military history and highlights the imperial dimensions of modern warfare. Britain, India, and the colonial Indian army exemplify the intertwined, global histories illuminated by attention to globalization and war. Around the world, geographies and wars are imagined differently. Cultural approaches to globalization show how popular consciousness of the world often takes military and warlike form, and how militaries spawn hybrid ''traveling cultures'' wherever they go. Finally, Barkawi examines the contemporary ''war on terror'' using historical and non-Eurocentric globalizations to clarify the politics and strategies involved in the purported ''clash of civilizations''. Adding a new layer of understanding, he looks at the globalization of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and the intensifying ''Israelization'' of the United States.