Terrell Carver
Terrell Foster Carver is a political theorist and academic.
Career
Carver was born in Boise, Idaho, in 1946, and grew up there, graduating from Boise High School in 1964. After receiving his B.A. summa cum laude in Government and History from Columbia University in 1968, Carver was awarded Columbia's Kellett Fellowship for graduate study in England.After finishing his BPhil and DPhil at Balliol College of Oxford University, he pursued an academic career, becoming a lecturer at the University of Liverpool in 1974. In 1980, Carver moved to the University of Bristol where in 1995 he was appointed Professor of Political Theory in the Department of Politics. Carver became a naturalised British citizen in 2013.
At Bristol, Carver organised and taught various undergraduate and postgraduate modules, including Contemporary Feminist Thought, Postmodern Political Theory, and Gender, Masculinities and International Relations, as well as methodological seminars in Discourse and Visual Analysis and supervisions and examinations for numerous PhD students. He served as Head of the Politics Department and administratively in the university's Study Abroad Programme for exchanges and student recruitment.
Alongside his teaching, Carver has contributed substantially to various fields of research, including Marx, Engels and Marxism; philosophy of social science, post-structuralism and feminist theory; and sex, gender and sexuality studies, notably men's and masculinity studies; contributing numerous articles to standard works of reference. His study Men in Political Theory remains unique. Besides doing his own translations of Marx's Later Political Writings for Cambridge University Press, Carver investigated the exact roles played by Engels in the composition of the Marxian canon and in the interpretative tradition that now surrounds it. Analogous to Derrida, Carver made novel contributions to scholarship on Marx as a historical figure existing "in the plural". Key works in this field include Marx's Social Theory ; Marx and Engels: The Intellectual Relationship ; The Postmodern Marx ; and Engels: A Very Short Introduction. In addition, Carver has offered commentary on the presence of Marxisms in non-academic arenas, analysing Grimes' relationship with The Communist Manifesto, and the fictionalisations of Engels. Carver also served for a term on the Redaktionskommission for the Marx-Engels-Gesamtusgabe headquartered in Berlin where he figured in the controversies of the 1990s concerning Engels’s role as editor of the three volumes of Marx’s Das Kapital.
Carver has gained academic notoriety for his employment of feminist and men's studies perspectives on masculinities, contributing to political theory and International Relations. Most notably, his works in the field include Gender is not a Synonym for Women, and Judith Butler and Political Theory: Troubling Politics. Much of Carver’s theorisations on gender, sex and sexuality are influenced by the work of post-structural feminist thinkers, such as Judith Butler, Donna Haraway and Stevi Jackson. In navigating their discursive readings of gender, Carver critically analyses the masculinist, universalising narratives that construct and maintain the oppression of women. His 2022 book Masculinities, Gender and International Relations turns this ‘gender lens’ onto the international politics of the legitimate arms trade and weapons manufacturing. In turn, Carver's contributions to gender, sex and sexuality studies have influenced notable feminist scholars, including Cynthia Enloe, Laura Shepherd, Catherine Eschle, and Sarah Childs.
Carver's research works have been translated into French, German, Spanish, Portuguese, Turkish, Arabic, Persian, Korean, Japanese, and Chinese.
Carver is the co-general editor of three-book series: 'Routledge Innovators in Political Theory', 'Globalization' for Rowman & Littlefield, and 'Marx, Engels, and Marxisms' for Palgrave Macmillan. He has been co-editor-in-chief of the journal Contemporary Political Theory since 2010.
Carver was a long-serving member of the executive committee of the Political Studies Association of the United Kingdom, during which time he created and managed an extensive program of exchange relationships with other national and international associations in political science. As a result, nearly 500 individuals received grants and aid, furthering the internationalisation of the profession and focusing on early career scholars and the Global South. He was also elected for two terms on the executive committee of the International Political Science Association, serving as vice-president for Europe, and was appointed Program Co-chair for the World Congress in Brisbane in 2018. He was also President's special nominee on the governing Council in 2023. He has served as Consulting Editor for the journal Political Theory and is an active member of the editorial boards for New Political Science, International Feminist Journal of Politics and International Political Science Review.
Awards and honours
In 2015, Carver was honoured, within the American Political Science Association, with the Charles A. McCoy Career Achievement Award, recognising him as a progressive political scientist who has had a long, successful career as an academic in teaching and service.Carver has been a visiting professor or associated fellow at numerous academic institutions, including Pitzer College of the Claremont Colleges, Senshu University, Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology University, and Fudan University. He has taught regularly for the International Political Science Association ‘Methods School’ at the National University of Singapore. In addition, Carver has been appointed affiliated professor at the University of the Witwatersrand, Peking University, and Nanjing University.
Marx, Engels and Marxisms
- Marx and Engels: The Intellectual Relationship
- The Postmodern Marx
- Engels before Marx
Gender/sex/sexuality and feminist political thought
- Gender is not a Synonym for Women
- Judith Butler and Political Theory: Troubling Politics
- Masculinities, Gender and International Relations
Books
- Karl Marx: Texts on Method
- The Logic of Marx
- Engels
- Marx’s Social Theory
- Marx and Engels: The Intellectual Relationship
- Marx and Engels: A Conceptual Concordance
- A Marx Dictionary
- Marx’s ‘Grundrisse’ and Hegel’s ‘Logic’
- Friedrich Engels: His Life and Thought ;The Life and Thought of Friedrich Engels, 30th anniversary edn with a new intro.
- The Cambridge Companion to Marx
- with Paul Thomas: Rational Choice Marxism: Assessments
- Cambridge Texts in the History of Political Thought: Marx, Later Political Writings
- Gender is not a Synonym for Woman
- Interpreting the Political: New Methodologies
- The Postmodern Marx
- The Politics of Sexuality
- Engels After Marx
- Men in Political Theory
- Palgrave Advances in Continental Political Thought
- Judith Butler and Political Theory: Troubling Politics
- Judith Butler's Precarious Politics: Critical Reflections
- Political Language and Metaphor: Interpreting and Changing the World
- William E. Connolly: Democracy, Pluralism and Political Theory
- Globality, Democracy and Civil Society
- Carole Pateman: Feminism, Democracy, Welfare
- Michael J. Shapiro: Discourse, Culture, Violence
- A Political History of the Editions of Marx and Engels’s ‘German Ideology Manuscripts’
- Marx and Engels’s ‘German ideology’ Manuscripts: Presentation and Analysis of the ‘Feuerbach chapter’
- The Cambridge Companion to the Communist Manifesto
- Histories of Violence
- Marx
- Engels Before Marx
- Friedrich Engels for the 21st Century
- ''Masculinities, Gender and International Relations''