Beyond Pain: The Role of Pleasure and Culture in the Making of Foreign Affairs

Beyond Pain: The Role of Pleasure and Culture in the Making of Foreign Affairs

by Thomas A. Breslin
Beyond Pain: The Role of Pleasure and Culture in the Making of Foreign Affairs

Beyond Pain: The Role of Pleasure and Culture in the Making of Foreign Affairs

by Thomas A. Breslin

Hardcover

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Overview

Breslin demonstrates that, for two millennia, states in East Asia, Europe, and America have successfully used pleasure to protect themselves and advance their interests, at a small fraction of the cost of militarized policies. Indeed, the Chinese demonstrated that pleasure-based policies primed a stream of highly profitable foreign trade and bolstered the state. Pleasure was feared because it was effective as both an offensive and defensive strategy. The colleens of Ireland and the bibis of India showed how inexorably effective pleasure could be in confounding militarily stronger invaders. In contrast, resorting to violence and pain generally undermined aggressive states.

Cultural factors have shaped the choice of pleasures used. Food-centered China has used food, as well as sex and tourism, as tools in its foreign relations. Rome used wine; Byzantium, precious metals, banquets, and public spectacles; Venice, sex, money, and art; England, money and education. America has used sex, money, education, music, and tourism. Breslin's provocative text is based on a wide reading of secondary sources and some primary sources as well as a quarter century of teaching the history of foreign relations.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780275974305
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Publication date: 10/30/2001
Series: Praeger Studies on Ethnic and National Identities in Politics
Pages: 216
Product dimensions: 6.14(w) x 9.21(h) x 0.46(d)

About the Author

THOMAS A. BRESLIN is Vice President for Research and Associate Professor of International Relations at Florida International University. Professor Breslin has published three earlier books and numerous articles in scholarly jourbanals.

Table of Contents

Preface
The Five Baits
Ten Thousand Persian Archers
Roman Virgins and Vandals
The Glittering Diplomacy of Byzantium
The Byzantine Doge and the Parsimonious Prince
Lording It Over the Britons: England's Anglo-Norman Empire
The British Empire: Doomed in the Fleshpots of Paris
Whiskey versus Rum: The Roots of America's Bicultural Foreign Policy
Sweet and Sour: China Deals with the Modern West
Bibliography
Index

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