Vous voulez voir cette page en français ? Cliquez ici.

Have one to sell? Sell yours here
The Unconquerable World
 
 

The Unconquerable World [Hardcover]

Jonathan Schell
4.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)

Available from these sellers.


Formats

Amazon Price New from Used from
Hardcover --  
Paperback CDN $16.06  

Product Details


Product Description

From Publishers Weekly

In what seems at the moment a quixotic thesis, Schell argues that warfare is no longer the ultimate arbiter of political power and that a maturing tradition of nonviolent political action offers hope for a peaceful future. Schell, an eloquent antiwar essayist best known for The Fate of the Earth (1982), begins with a study of the modern "war system," which he says proceeds from Clausewitz's premise that wars are fought to secure political objectives. As wars grew increasingly devastating, they became unwieldy means to achieve political ends. Since no political goal justifies annihilation, the Cold War nuclear standoff made the war system obsolete. Meanwhile, people's revolutions were also contributing to the demise of the war system. Citing Gandhi's independence campaign and anti-Soviet dissident movements. Schell argues, not totally convincingly, that political liberation can be achieved by popular will alone, through passive resistance and active construction of civil society. As we enter what Schell calls "the second nuclear age," in which proliferation threatens us with a "nuclear 1914," he warns against the Bush administration's "Augustan" policies of "unchallengeable military domination." Schell proposes instead the development of cooperative institutions to promote four goals: banning weapons of mass destruction, using shared sovereignty to settle wars of self-determination, enforcing an international law prohibiting crimes against humanity and creating a "democratic league." Hard-nosed realists will consider these ideas na‹ve pacifism. But at a time when Americans feel insecure despite overwhelming military superiority, Schell's radical rethinking of the relationship between war and political power offers a fresh and hopeful perspective.
Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Booklist

In high-concept arguments about contemporary international relations, Schell asks if the modern history of violence, revolution, democracy, and nuclear war has any insights to offer the antiwar cause. In addition to selecting evidence from history's record, Schell paraphrases the views on force set forth by Clausewitz, Gandhi, Mao, Hannah Arendt, and others. This work is decidedly not rah-rah writing for peace activists but, rather, intellectual scaffolding for them. Schell has a twofold premise: the historical escalation of war's lethality makes the "war system" obsolete, which provides the chance, due to the revival of democracy in many countries in the 1990s, to replace it with a new and improved liberal internationalism. Prescriptively, this means Schell wants to ban the bomb and construct a "democratic league"--something like the EU on a global scale. Is this wooly-headed thought or practical-minded optimism? However one responds to Schell's presentation, his liberal views will be sought in this time of intensified awareness of world politics. Gilbert Taylor
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Inside This Book (Learn More)
First Sentence
Some of the most important changes for the future of war have come from within war itself. Read the first page
Explore More
Concordance
Browse Sample Pages
Front Cover | Copyright | Table of Contents | Excerpt | Index | Back Cover
Search inside this book:

Tag this product

 (What's this?)
Think of a tag as a keyword or label you consider is strongly related to this product.
Tags will help all customers organize and find favorite items.
Your tags: Add your first tag
 

 

Customer Reviews

5 Reviews
5 star:
 (4)
4 star:
 (1)
3 star:    (0)
2 star:    (0)
1 star:    (0)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
4.8 out of 5 stars (5 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
Share your thoughts with other customers:
Most helpful customer reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars Schell's Pacifist Manifesto., Feb 1 2004
By 
G. Merritt (Boulder, CO) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: The Unconquerable World (Hardcover)
Best known for THE FATE OF THE EARTH (1982), Jonathan Schell is an anti-war essayist and frequent contributor to "The Nation," "The New Yorker," "Harper's," "The Atlantic," and "Foreign Affairs" magazines. In his pacifist manifesto, THE UNCONQUERABLE WORLD, Schell examines the history of conventional war, nuclear war, people's war and revolution, from Von Clausewitz's premise that wars are fought to secure political objectives, to the Bush administration's ongoing "war on terrorism," while simultaneously examining the history of nonviolence, from Jesus's commandment to "put up thy sword," to Gandhi's, Havel's, and Martin Luther King's more recent nonviolent victories. (King liked to say that Jesus gave him "the message," and Gandhi gave him "the method" to practice what he preached, p. 246.) Along the way, Schell carefully develops his argument that all government depends for its existence on the cooperation of its citizens, civil servants, and soldiers. If that cooperation is withdrawn, the government will fail in its objectives (p. 128). This philosophy ("satyagraha") was demonstrated by Ghandi, who prescribed nonviolent action in which the participants refused to cooperate with laws they regarded as unjust or otherwise offensive to their consciences, accompanied by their willingness to suffer the consequences (p. 119). "The nonviolent actor," Schell observes, "exhibits the highest degree of freedom also because his action originates within himself, according to his own judgment, inclination, and conscience, not in helpless, automatic response to something done by someone else" (p. 133). In other words, noviolence is a means by which "the active many can overcome the ruthless few" (p. 144).

Since September 11th, Schell writes, the "Augustan" policies of the Bush administration have brought us to the brink of "some nuclear 1914 or anthrax 1914" that could "send history off the rails" (p. 8). Americans are now faced with a choice between "two Americas" and two possible futures. In an imperial America, power would be put in the hands of the president and checks and balances would end; civil liberties would be lost; military spending would supercede social spending; the gap between rich and poor would increase; electoral politics would be dominated by corporate money; and social, economic, and ecological agendas would be neglected. In an alternative America, the immense executive power would be broken up into the three branches of government as the Constitution provides; civil liberties would remain intact; money would be driven out of politics; and the social, economic, and ecological agendas of the country and world would become government's chief concern (pp. 345-46). Whereas the Bush administration's policies rely upon individuals confirming the system, fulfilling the system, making the system, becoming the system ("living the lie"), Schell advocates a revolution in our hearts and minds in which violence becomes unnecessary, and we are able to live instead in truth, which means living in opposition to the repressive regime.

Carefully reasoned, thoroughly analytical, radical, brilliantly revolutionary, highly intellectual, and hopeful, Schell's UNCONQUERABLE WORLD is one of the most important books of our time.

G. Merritt

Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 
Was this review helpful to you? Yes No


5.0 out of 5 stars Power In The People, Jan 17 2004
This review is from: The Unconquerable World (Hardcover)
Schell's identification of the phenomenon of "people's war," the
bottom-up fight for freedom waged by colonized peoples over the last 250
years is nothing short of revolutionary. The basis of the analytical framework he builds to explicate the different varieties of colonial oppression and local resistance, Schell historicizes people's war in its most important incarnations starting with the Spanish resistance to Napoleon's invasion, moving through Gandhi's non-violent formulation which he developed in South Africa and employed against the British in India, discussing how this form of resistance taken up by Martin Luther King to fight the people's war against the squalid Jim Crow regime in the American South. He notes that over time, "people's war" has been successful more often than it has not, that colonial regimes cannot win against forces which refuse to fight using oppressor's tactics, or use the narrow forms of redress, such as "working through the system," which are offered by those in power under the head of democracy.

He begins by examining the great military strategist Von Clausewitz's theory of warfare. In a section that it perhaps somewhat overlong, Schell takes apart Clausewitz in light of the changes in warfare since Clausewitz's time. Clausewitz did witness the first examples of total war in which every citizen was enlisted in the war as either a soldier or as a possible target of war -- the great "democratic" army of Napoleon, and wrote about it in contrast to prior European wars where relatively small forces of men fought limited conflicts for their aristocratic masters. What Clausewitz could not see was that with the emergence of the atomic bomb, total war was extended beyond competing nations, their peoples and ideologies, to include the entire world and the possible destruction of humanity. He notes, as does Jeremi Suri does in his history of the post-nuclear age, POWER AND THE PEOPLE, that the possession of nuclear weapons and the protests such weapons engendered (including the proxy wars fought by client states which became a feature of the post WWII landscape and were much more likely to end a global conflagration than skirmishes before the bomb) ultimately served to push together the Soviet Union and United States out of fear of their own people.

Schell also discusses various theories of power, including the Hobbesian justification of power, the Weberian observation that the state holds power by reserving the right to violence. He upends a lot of this theory by noting that fear and intimidation only work for so long. Eventually people begin, like water freezing in a crack in the sidewalk, to break apart the structures of such regimes. He discusses how Vaclav Havel and his friends during the Soviet occupation initiated a small scale alternative "government" which sought to deliver minimal social goods, a stop that worked to give citizens a way to see they could exert control over their own lives even in the shadow of the totalitarian state. This strategy that has been used since the American elite formed the Committees of Correspondence and the Continental Congress to throw off the oppressive economic policies of their colonial masters. The "people's government" was in place and thus Washington's task was to outlast his opponents so that this government could take its rightful place -- a strategy which has been used in successful "people's war" ever since. Once the state is made irrelevant, it ceases to exist, an analysis growing out of Hannah Arendt's discussions of power.

It is hard to do justice to a work like this in a short review. Schell advances a fairly radical theory here, but his evidence is sound, his argument is clear and straightforward (although a bit repetitive). Perhaps most compelling in this age of "terror," Schell helps us see that resistance against colonial powers and homegrown totalitarian regimes has a long history, and that for the most part, that people's war has been successful.

Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 
Was this review helpful to you? Yes No


5.0 out of 5 stars People Power, Oct 31 2003
By 
Richard H. Burkhart "Dick Burkhart" (Seattle, WA USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: The Unconquerable World (Hardcover)
Through incisive historical analysis, Schell demonstrates that people power has been ignored to our own peril. In the modern world people simply won't settle for the neo-colonial status assigned to them by the corporate globalization / militarization machine. Just think about the war in Iraq and the new regimes in South America, for example, or the collapse of the WTO talks in Cancun. And WMD have made the old and disasterous paradigm of all-out warfare obsolete.

Schell traces people power through the American, French, and Russian revolutions, onto Gandhi's non-violent action and Mao's peoples' war. What is amazing is that even the most violent and repressive regimes have eventually collapsed non-violently. Often the greatest violence has come during the drive to establish a new order.

Schell also suggests that we need to update the principles of liberal democracy. For example, respect for individual rights may need to be extended to include group rights, responsibilities, and power sharing. He cites the settlement in Northern Ireland as an example. This is, of course, tricky business, but he makes a compelling case that we need to be more flexible and far sighted in our concepts of democracy.

Schell, now a columnist for The Nation, is a creative thinker and analyst of the first order - a true public intellectual.

Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 
Was this review helpful to you? Yes No

Share your thoughts with other customers: Create your own review
Want to see more reviews on this item?
 Go to Amazon.com to see all 13 reviews  4.2 out of 5 stars 
 
 
Most recent customer reviews



Only search this product's reviews



Listmania!

Create a Listmania! list

Look for similar items by category


Look for similar items by subject


Feedback