Land and Sea: A World-Historical Meditation (German: Land und Meer. Eine weltgeschichtliche Betrachtung) is a 1942 book by the German writer Carl Schmitt. It is an analysis of spatiality and politics, especially as it relates to land powers and sea powers. Schmitt associated merchant and maritime power with the Biblical Leviathan, referring to the period of Britain and the United States as great powers as the Age of Leviathan, and argued that this type of rule is unstable because it cannot help being undermined.[1][2][3][4]
Author | Carl Schmitt |
---|---|
Original title | Land und Meer. Eine weltgeschichtliche Betrachtung |
Language | German |
Publisher | Reclam |
Publication date | 1942 |
Publication place | Germany |
Published in English | 1997 |
Pages | 76 |
Along with The Nomos of the Earth (1950), Land and Sea is central in Schmtt's writings about space.[1]
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ a b Simons, Oliver (2013). "Carl Schmitt's Spatial Rhetoric". In Meierhenrich, Jens; Simons, Oliver (eds.). The Oxford Handbook of Carl Schmitt. Oxford Academic. pp. 776–783. doi:10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199916931.013.42.
- ^ Geyer, Carl-Friedrich (1998). "Maritime Existenz und politische Theologie". Nordeuropaforum (in German). 1. doi:10.18452/7709.
- ^ Murphy, Peter (2017). "Land versus sea". Thesis Eleven. 142 (1): 130–145. doi:10.1177/0725513617727908.
- ^ Kearns, Gerry (2011). "Echoes of Carl Schmitt among the ideologists of the new American Empire". Spatiality, Sovereignty and Carl Schmitt: Geographies of the Nomos. Routledge. pp. 81–82. ISBN 978-0-415-60067-5.