#4,331 in History books
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Reddit mentions of Machiavellism
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Reddit mentions: 1
We found 1 Reddit mentions of Machiavellism. Here are the top ones.
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Height | 9 Inches |
Length | 6 Inches |
Number of items | 1 |
Release date | January 1997 |
Weight | 1.19931470528 Pounds |
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The book you are looking for is Machiavellism by Friedrich Meinecke. It was written in German, but you can find it in English translation:
This is the real deal. You'll be drinking straight from the firehose.
Hans Morgenthau's Politics Among Nations is more accessible than Meinecke. It's written more as a textbook than as history of an idea. This is Morgenthau bringing the German understanding of realpolitik (read as: Meinecke) to Americans who found realism alien to their generally liberal political tradition. It has the theory, the applications, and the historical examples.
Morgenthau and his star pupil, Kenneth Thompson (who edited Politics Among Nations), more or less created the field of International Relations as we know it today. (That story is told in Nicholas Guilhot's The Invention of International Relations Theory.)
If you want to know more about the history of different ideas within "realism" and the transition that academic realism went through from Morgenthau to Mearsheimer, check out Jonathan Haslam's No Virtue Like Necessity: Realist Thought in International Relations since Machiavelli.
Finally, you'll want to pick up a copy of Machiavelli's The Prince. How could you not?