Duncan S. A. Bell’s research while affiliated with Christ College and other places

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Publications (15)


Empire and international relations in Victorian political thought
  • Article

March 2006

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71 Reads

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94 Citations

The Historical Journal

DUNCAN S. A.  BELL 

This essay surveys recent scholarly work on the political theory of empire and international relations in Britain during the long nineteenth century. It traces the dominant themes and arguments to be found, points to some interpretative and methodological weaknesses, and highlights a number of topics that remain to be explored in detail. I focus on the following: the relationship between liberalism and empire and, in particular, the role played by the idea of civilization in circumscribing liberal claims to universality; the nature and evolution of international law, and the key role that jurisprudential thought played in shaping conceptions of civilization and setting the bounds of legitimacy for imperialism; the vexed relationship between the history of imperial thought and cultural/political history; and the important, though frequently marginalized, role of the colonial empire in the Victorian imperial imagination. Finally, I suggest that areas that remain to be explored in depth include non-liberal visions of international affairs; the role of theology in shaping conceptions of global order; and the balance between the United States, Europe, and the various (and very different) elements of the empire.



History and Globalization: Reflections on Temporality

July 2003

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442 Reads

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21 Citations

International Affairs

Globalization emerged as the buzzword of the 1990s, and, at the dawn of a new millennium, it continues to transfix academics, the media and policy-makers alike. However, one of the key gaps in the research into the process(es) of globalization has concerned its historical identity: the story (and analysis) of its origins, its development and mutation over time, and the continuities and differences between past and present. In this article the author sketches a typology of claims made about the historical identity of globlization in the current literature, and points to some unexplored and fruitful avenues of enquiry. Following this, two recent books are reviewed which attempt, in different but complementary ways, to deepen our understanding of globalization in history. The article concludes with a call for further research on this and related topics.


Mythscapes: Memory, mythology, and national identity

April 2003

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2,076 Reads

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514 Citations

In this paper I seek to challenge the dominant modes of conceiving the relationship between memory and national identity, and in so doing offer analysts of nationalism an improved understanding of the dynamics of national identity formation. The concept of collective memory is invoked regularly in attempts to explain the pervasiveness and power of nationalism. I argue that the concept is misused routinely in this context, and instead I employ a 'social agency' approach to theorizing, whereby memory is conceived in a more limited and cogent manner. I argue that it is important to distinguish clearly between memory and mythology, both of which are essential to understanding national identity, for not only are the two concepts distinct, they can also act in opposition to each other. Following from this I introduce the notion of a 'mythscape', the temporally and spatially extended discursive realm in which the myths of the nation are forged, transmitted, negotiated, and reconstructed constantly. Through employing the idea of a mythscape we can relate memory and mythology to each other in a theoretically profitable way.




Anarchy, power and death: Contemporary political realism as ideology

June 2002

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85 Reads

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22 Citations

Journal of Political Ideologies

There has recently been a renaissance of interest in ideological analysis, and this is to be greatly welcomed. However, there is a noticeable lack of concern with international political ideologies, a position that mirrors the pernicious disciplinary dichotomy between political theory and international relations (IR) theory. In this essay I offer a critique of this state-centric understanding of ideology, and consequently offer an extension of Michael Freeden's morphological approach. In order to demonstrate the utility of this extension, I offer an innovative analysis of contemporary political realism, an ideology that has played an important role in recent US academic and policy debates, most notably in the current Bush administration. It is argued that much contemporary realism is conceptually sovereign-centric rather than, as is commonly assumed, state-centric. The other two central concepts are anarchy and power.


International Relations: The Dawn of a Historiographical Turn?

February 2002

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88 Reads

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86 Citations

British Journal of Politics & International Relations

Books reviewed in this article: Donnelly, Jack, Realism in International Relations Dunne, Tim, Inventing International Society: A History of the English School Schmidt, Brian, The Political Discourse of Anarchy: A Disciplinary History of International Relations Tuck, Richard, The Rights of War and Peace: Political Thought and the International Order from Grotius to Kant




Citations (7)


... As excellent books often do, the themes and methods from Dreamworlds of Race inspire additional questions and thinking about further implications. As he has highlighted in previous works, Bell takes his cues from the Cambridge School of historians, whose collective works emphasize the historicity of concepts and conduct in-depth analyses of the social and political context behind rhetorical claims (Bell 2002). In doing so, they bridge the fields of global history and the international relations (IR) subfield within political science. ...

Reference:

Language, race, civilization: What is (and isn’t) Anglo-America?
Language, Legitimacy, and the Project of Critique
  • Citing Article
  • July 2002

Alternatives Global Local Political

... Biological approaches to the study of political behavior have grown exponentially over the last few years (Alford, Funk, & Hibbing, 2005;Fowler & Schreiber, 2008;Hatemi et al., 2009;McDermott, 2004). The increasing prominence of these studies has precipitated many questions and much confusion about how best and whether to integrate these approaches into mainstream research (Alford & Hibbing, 2004;Bell, 2006;Bell & MacDonald, 2001;Charney, 2008;McDermott, Fowler, & Smirnov, 2008;Rosen, 2005;Sagarin & Taylor, 2008;Sidanius & Kurzban, 2003;Thayer, 2000Thayer, , 2004. Importantly, this general debate has tended to overlook the important distinction between two highly distinct strands of existing research: one that explains behavioral outcomes as a consequence of underlying genotypic differences across and between individuals in a population (e.g., a gene, or "allele," present in some members of the population but not in others); 1 and another that explains behavior as a product of species-typical adaptations (e.g., psychological, neural, biochemical, etc.) shared by humans as a consequence of natural selection (Mayr, 1983;Williams, 1966). ...

Correspondence: Start the Evolution without Us
  • Citing Article
  • January 2001

International Security

... Realists believe that states must refrain from trusting each other in this anarchic world, making cooperation difficult to achieve in the longer run. The Realist school of thought has influenced the foreign policy of both Pakistan and Iran, leading to decisions prioritizing state survival, even at the cost of disharmony between the two nations (Bell, 2002). ...

Anarchy, power and death: Contemporary political realism as ideology
  • Citing Article
  • June 2002

Journal of Political Ideologies

... By adapting Darwin's concepts of 'evolution' and 'competition' to analyze the social world, some scientists, intellectuals, and other groups in Europe and America came to view themselves as part of a superior civilization, representing the final stage of human development. This idea, a distortion of Darwin's concepts, would be used to justify colonialism, and the discourse of 'the white man's burden': in other words, their situation as more evolved would impose on them the mission of 'civilizing' the world (Bell 2006;Schmitt 2014;Heraclides and Dialla 2015: 31-32). 2 By the late 19 th century, rationalist projects of transforming society and humans into better versions of themselves by science and technology, the idea of a 'New Man' 3 (Williams 2019: 73-79), was steadily propagated by literature, especially utopian literature and science fiction (Gomel 2004: 358-359;Cheng 2008: 8-14;Vieira 2010). 4 Keeping in mind this intellectual and political landscape in which the science fiction genre have consolidated in the West, we can thus 'travel' to the context of the Global South. ...

Empire and international relations in Victorian political thought
  • Citing Article
  • March 2006

The Historical Journal

... Daí a importância da atuação das gestões da área de HRIPE em buscar um diálogo mais próximo com a História, que consiga diminuir essa disparidade a partir do encontro com a historiografia nacional (e internacional). Nesse sentido, as parcerias estratégicas da área de HRIPE e suas palestras temáticas nos eventos da ABRI, que têm focado na difusão de conhecimento sobre o manejo de fontes históricas, pesquisas em arquivos etc., contribuem sobremaneira para permitir a participação de (e o diálogo com) historiadores, já que estes eventos menores fogem das datas dos eventos principais das associações; e para mitigar uma das grandes críticas que analistas internacionais e cientistas políticos enfrentam ao se debruçar sobre a História: o mal uso do método histórico (Bell 2001;D'Aoust 2004;Máximo 2020) É importante notar, no entanto, que a despeito do ensino de HRI nos cursos de graduação do país ser marcado por perspectivas eurocêntricas e ocidentais, a pesquisa em HRI vista no âmbito da ABRI, tem mais interesse pela história local (seja pela História do Brasil ou da América). Todavia, assim como as tendências das bibliografias indicadas nestes cursos revelam uma "desvalorização da presença feminina" (Moreli, Froio, Tomas e Barbosa 2022, 25), os autores de HRI na ABRI também são majoritariamente homens -de instituições públicas da região sudeste do país. ...

International Relations: The Dawn of a Historiographical Turn?
  • Citing Article
  • February 2002

British Journal of Politics & International Relations

... Myths often create memories of the place and play a significant role in constructing and reinforcing Newari identities. Within the traditional Newar country of Patan, the governing myth that shaped its identity as the "city of artisan" or "city of fine arts" often co-exists with subaltern myths that reinforce or contest the narrative constructed by the governing myth of Patan (See Bell, 2003). These myths collectively shape destination identities that reflect the values and belief systems of the autochthonous Newar from the place. ...

Mythscapes: Memory, mythology, and national identity
  • Citing Article
  • April 2003