Abstract
This paper aims to introduce a neglected methodology from Japanese
international relations (IR) – the culturalist methodology – to Anglophone
specialists in IR. This methodology is neglected not only by an Anglophone
audience but also by Japanese IR scholars. I argue here that despite this
negligence, the culturalist methodology has great potential to contribute to
contemporary post-Western international relations theory (IRT) literature by
posing radical questions about the ontology of IR, as it questions not only the
ontology of Western IR, but also the IR discourses developed in the rest of the
world. Consequently, in understanding and imagining the contemporary world,
I clarify the importance of perceptions based on what, in Japan, are commonly
called ‘international cultural relations’ (kokusai bunka) and ‘regional history’
(chiikishi). I also indicate how our perceptions of the world are limited by the
Westphalian principles of state sovereignty and non-intervention among ‘equal’
nations on the basis of state borders. While historical understanding is widely
recognised as an important approach to contemporary IR, its scope is limited
by its universalised principles.