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Identity, Interest and Action: A Cultural Explanation of Sweden's Intervention in the Thirty Years War (Cambridge Cultural Social Studies)

Identity, Interest and Action: A Cultural Explanation of Sweden's Intervention in the Thirty Years War (Cambridge Cultural Social Studies)

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Erik Ringmar
Cambridge University Press, 10/3/1996
EAN 9780521563147, ISBN10: 0521563143

Hardcover, 252 pages, 22.9 x 15.2 x 1.8 cm
Language: English
Originally published in English

This book offers an original combination of cultural and narrative theory with an empirical study of identity and political action. It is at once a powerful critique of rational choice theories of action and a solution to the historiographical puzzle of why Sweden went to war in 1630. Erik Ringmar argues that people act not only for reasons of interest, but also for reasons of identity, and that the latter are, in fact, more fundamental. Deploying his alternative, non-rational theory of action in his account of the Swedish intervention in the Thirty Years War, he shows it to have been an attempt on behalf of the Swedish leaders to gain recognition for themselves and their country. Further to this, he demonstrates the importance of questions of identity to the study of war and of narrative theories of action to the social sciences in general.

Acknowledgements
Introduction
the beginning of the story
Part I. A Narrative Theory of Action
1. Historical and scientific explanations
2. The modern orthodoxy
3. A narrative theory of action
Part II. Why Did Sweden Go to War in 1630?
4. Historical and cultural preliminaries
5. Fighting for a national interest
6. Fighting for a national identity
Conclusion
the end of the story?
Notes
Bibliography
Index.