
Contents
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Civilisation and its critics Civilisation and its critics
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Beyond the contested concept Beyond the contested concept
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Method, morality and the public intellectual Method, morality and the public intellectual
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Islam and public rhetoric Islam and public rhetoric
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Notes Notes
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6 Chaotic epic: Samuel Huntington’s The Clash of Civilizations and the Remaking of World Order revisited
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Published:September 2017
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Abstract
As a core interpretative text of the immediate post-Cold War period, The Clash of Civilizations acquired an almost infamous status amongst liberal circles on account of a perceived melange of cultural essentialism, conservative realist thinking, and a confidently negative appraisal of world trends. In this chapter, James Dunkerley reviews the initial, often critical reception of Clash of Civilizations and seeks to explain why the text has continued to enjoy such widespread attention. He agrees with the view that, alongside Francis Fukuyama’s The End of History and John Mearsheimer’s The Tragedy of Great Power Politics, it forms part of distinct ‘moment’ following the collapse of the USSR and the complex challenges of the USA becoming, at least transiently, a ‘unipolar power’. However, he also identifies the continued salience of the text in Huntington’s often adept assessment of regional political trends, even when these are entirely divorced from his underlying civilizational thesis.
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