Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-rcrh6 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-24T03:04:08.840Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Marxist perspectives and the study of international relations: a rejoinder

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 October 2009

Extract

Professor Frankel in his reply to our article ‘A Double Omission’, not only denies the existence of any such omission (let alone double) as we there described, but argues that the perception of such a (non-existent) omission lays the authors open to the charge of being guilty of an omission more glaring than that which we attributed to the more myopic side of Western international theory. Professor Frankel in his rebuttal considers that neither Marx nor the Soviet Marxist-Leninists have anything of import to contribute to Western thinking on international relations and that our article, in other words, had no substance whatsoever. He makes the claim that Marx's writings not only ‘require specialized skills’ in order to be studied but that even when these are brought to bear the intellectual profits are ‘likely to be scanty’. But, in any case, argues Frankel, these (writings) were ‘given full due … in writings on such special areas of international relations as revolution, conflict or imperialism’, — not, that is to say, on international relations in the more general sense.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © British International Studies Association 1981

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1. British Journal of International Studies, iv (1978), pp. 5961Google Scholar.

2. Ibid, III (1977), pp. 286–307.

3. Frankel,op. cit. p. 59.

4. Loc. cit.

5. Loc. Cit.

6. Loc. cit.

7. Approaches and Theory in International Politics (London, 1978), p. 2Google Scholar.

8. ‘A New Brezhnev Doctrine: the Restructuring of International Relations’, World Politics, xxx (1978), p. 367Google Scholar; p. 388.

9. Routledge and Kegan Paul (London), 1980.

10. op. cit. p. 296.

11. Frankel,op. cit. p. 60.

12. Aspaturian, V. V., Process and Power in Soviet Foreign Policy (Boston, 1971), p. 191Google Scholar.

13. Mitchell,op. cit. p. 390.

14. Ibid. p. 361.

15. Ibid. pp. 361,262.

16. V. Kubalkova, A. A. Cruickshank,Marxism-Leninism and Theory of International Relations, op. cit. p. 297

17. Mitchell,op. cit. p. 381.

18. Frankel,op. cit. p. 60.

19. Ibid. p. 59.

20. T. Taylor,op. cit, pp. 56ff.

21. Preface toMarxism-Leninism and Theory of International Relations, op. cit. p. ix.