Acknowledgements
Preface: Troubling Peace
Introduction: Beyond Universal Peace
Chapter 1. Assigning Symmetry: Plato's Laws and the Polis's
Wars
Chapter 2. Summoning Hostility: Al-Farabi, Aquinas, and Warlike
Peace
Interlude I-Deflections: Friends, Neighbors, Advisers
Chapter 3. Loving Necessity: Erasmus between Christianity and
Islam
Chapter 4. Ordering Legality: Gentili, Grotius, and Law for War
Interlude II-Refractions: Missionaries, Nomads, Pirates
Chapter 5. Colonizing Frontiers: Ibn Khaldun, Hobbes, and
Commodious Violence
Chapter 6. Policing Humanity: Immanuel Kant, Sayyid Qutb, and
Shades of Empire
Epilogue: Unmaking Peace
Murad Idris is an Assistant Professor of Politics, University of Virginia; co-editor of forthcoming Oxford Handbook of Comparative Political Theory
"A bold and powerful voice who dares to question the ideal of
peace, Murad Idris takes us on a journey in the history of
political thought to show how war and peace have been inextricably
intertwined. Figures like the infidel, the barbarian, the nomad,
and the pirate emerge as the vivid correlates of the brother, the
neighbor, and the friend on a moral and moralizing terrain in which
peace authorizes and justifies war. This is an essential and
captivating read,
which provocatively suggests that peace is not just a solution but
also a problem." - Banu Bargu, History of Consciousness, University
of California, Santa Cruz, and author of Starve and Immolate:
The
Politics of Human Weapons
"War for Peace is a meticulously researched and provocative book,
remarkable for its scope and originality. Idris moves with ease
among thinkers from Plato to Sayyid Qutb, asking crucial questions
not only about what discourses of peace say, but also about what
they do. His arguments are compelling, and bring into sharp relief
the ways in which 'peace' is a site of political power, as well as
a powerful moralizing tool. The book is a major achievement,
and should be read by scholars, policymakers, and politicians
alike-along with anyone who cares about peace." - Roxanne L. Euben,
University of Pennsylvania
"This book is an original and ambitious piece of scholarship. It is
rare to encounter books on political theory with the erudition and
linguistic literacy that Idris commands. To plot a history of
political theory from the Greeks through the Romans and the Arabs
to Renaissance Europe and the Enlightenment, moving forward to the
Arab Renaissance and twentieth century thinkers, is a feat few have
attempted before and never as successfully." - Joseph Massad,
Columbia University and author of Islam in Liberalism
"From ancient times, the professed aspiration for peace has served
as perhaps the most fertile justification and warrant for war. In
recent decades, this longstanding complicity has assumed indecent
proportions in the rhetoric of presidents, leaders, and in the
thinking of ordinary citizens. With skeptical and irreverent
intelligence, erudition, and insight, War for Peace exposes the
political, conceptual, and ethical minefield that has surrounded
the
invocation of peace from ancient Athens, through to Islam and the
modern west." - Uday S. Mehta, Distinguished Professor of Political
Science, Graduate Center, City University of New York
"War for Peace is a landmark study in the field of political
theory, exploring how the concept of peace has been profoundly
fused with practices of violence and war-making. Alongside the
erudition and analytical power with which Idris develops these
arguments, what makes the book so remarkable is how it transcends
traditional philosophical divisions between Occident and Orient,
Ancient and Modern. In exploring the links between thinkers as
wide-ranging as Plato, Ibn Khaldun, and Kant, Idris challenges the
typical histories of political thought and dazzlingly highlights
the shared predicaments that have marked essential texts on war and
peace." - Aziz Rana,
author of The Two Faces of American Freedom
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