英文摘要 |
It is widely shared among students of international politics that realism has a tradition from as far as back as Thucydides, through Marchivelli, Hobbes, Carr, Morgenthau, and then down to Waltz. This paper questions this tradition by historicizing each of the realist authors and providing a reading that reveals the differences among them. The paper touches upon academic politics behind the reproduction of realist tradition and argues that students of international politics should first study realism, instead of realist politics. |