This article analyses the international thought of the US sinologist and political advisor Owen Lattimore (1900-89). A well-known expert on China and the Far East, Lattimore was a public intellectual and advisor to Chiang Kai-shek and Franklin D. Roosevelt. In 1950, after Senator Joseph McCarthy accused him of Soviet espionage, Lattimore's reputation was irrevocably damaged and his political thought forgotten. By assessing his visions of global democracy and geopolitics, this article claims Lattimore made insightful contributions to international thought. On the eve of the cold war, Lattimore's ideas of pluralistic democracy and tripolar world order offered an alternative vision of the post-war era, focusing on political participation and diversity. This article focuses on Lattimore's published writings in the 1940s, when, as political advisor and director of the Johns Hopkins Page School of International Relations, he sought to shift international attention from Europe to the Far East as the potential birthplace of a new version of post-colonial democracy. A fervent anti-imperialist, Lattimore crafted new political space for global democracy in a post-imperial age. His thoughtful discussion of participation, co-operation, democracy, knowledge, and pluralism make his vision of world order an interesting contribution to international thought in the twentieth century.

Rosenboim O. (2014). Geopolitics and global democracy in owen lattimore's political thought. THE INTERNATIONAL HISTORY REVIEW, 36(4), 745-766 [10.1080/07075332.2013.828641].

Geopolitics and global democracy in owen lattimore's political thought

Rosenboim O.
Primo
2014

Abstract

This article analyses the international thought of the US sinologist and political advisor Owen Lattimore (1900-89). A well-known expert on China and the Far East, Lattimore was a public intellectual and advisor to Chiang Kai-shek and Franklin D. Roosevelt. In 1950, after Senator Joseph McCarthy accused him of Soviet espionage, Lattimore's reputation was irrevocably damaged and his political thought forgotten. By assessing his visions of global democracy and geopolitics, this article claims Lattimore made insightful contributions to international thought. On the eve of the cold war, Lattimore's ideas of pluralistic democracy and tripolar world order offered an alternative vision of the post-war era, focusing on political participation and diversity. This article focuses on Lattimore's published writings in the 1940s, when, as political advisor and director of the Johns Hopkins Page School of International Relations, he sought to shift international attention from Europe to the Far East as the potential birthplace of a new version of post-colonial democracy. A fervent anti-imperialist, Lattimore crafted new political space for global democracy in a post-imperial age. His thoughtful discussion of participation, co-operation, democracy, knowledge, and pluralism make his vision of world order an interesting contribution to international thought in the twentieth century.
2014
Rosenboim O. (2014). Geopolitics and global democracy in owen lattimore's political thought. THE INTERNATIONAL HISTORY REVIEW, 36(4), 745-766 [10.1080/07075332.2013.828641].
Rosenboim O.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11585/956697
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