February’s books of the month
This month’s international relations book is an easy call — Stephen D. Krasner’s Sovereignty: Organized Hypocrisy. Since Krasner was appointed to be the State Department’s Director of Policy Planning this week, it seems fitting for people to take a look at his most recent sole-authored book. This would be particularly useful because if there is ...
This month's international relations book is an easy call -- Stephen D. Krasner's Sovereignty: Organized Hypocrisy. Since Krasner was appointed to be the State Department's Director of Policy Planning this week, it seems fitting for people to take a look at his most recent sole-authored book. This would be particularly useful because if there is one thing the DC press corps sucks eggs at, it's parsing out the policy implications of academic writings. For exhibit A, consider Al Kamen's column from a few weeks ago which tried to uncover Krasner's thoughts about foreign policy from his latest article in Foreign Policy. Key paragraph:
This month’s international relations book is an easy call — Stephen D. Krasner’s Sovereignty: Organized Hypocrisy. Since Krasner was appointed to be the State Department’s Director of Policy Planning this week, it seems fitting for people to take a look at his most recent sole-authored book. This would be particularly useful because if there is one thing the DC press corps sucks eggs at, it’s parsing out the policy implications of academic writings. For exhibit A, consider Al Kamen’s column from a few weeks ago which tried to uncover Krasner’s thoughts about foreign policy from his latest article in Foreign Policy. Key paragraph:
[T]hough [Krasner] has long been respected as a premier thinker firmly in the realist camp, his latest views on preventive war seem to be more in sync with the Pentagon’s, judging from his article in the most recent issue of Foreign Policy. In that piece, Krasner speculates on what would happen if terrorists set off nuclear explosions here and in New Delhi, Berlin and Los Angeles.
Well, the last thing I would want in a director of policy planning is to have someone who…. plans out contingencies for future world-historical events. Now, before I anounce my general interest book, would everyone under the age of 18 please go click over somewhere else right now. Go ahead, I’ll wait…. OK, adults only? Here’s the thing — I had a general interest book all picked out — and then I checked my mail today and saw a very thick envelope. In it was a copy of Paul Joannides’ The Guide to Getting It On!. The accompanying note reads as follows:
Dr. Drezner, With two young children, a wife, a beagle, your academic background, and a blog that’s long enough to gag a UN hooker, you need to have a copy of the Guide somewhere on your shelves. Enjoy, Goofy Foot Press
This is how my life has changed since starting a blog — in the same week, I can go from appearing on C-SPAN to receiving gratis copies of sex manuals. I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again: I have a small, deeply disturbed following. [Say, maybe you could put that “blog that’s long enough to gag a UN hooker” among your praiseworthy reviews!!–ed. No, no I really couldn’t.]
Daniel W. Drezner is a professor of international politics at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University and co-host of the Space the Nation podcast. Twitter: @dandrezner
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