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Debating civilisations

Interrogating civilisational analysis in a global age

Jeremy C. A. Smith

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Manchester University Press img Link Publisher

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Beschreibung

This electronic version has been made available under a Creative Commons (BY-NC) open access license. Debating civilisations offers an up-to-date evaluation of the re-emerging field of civilisational analysis, tracing its main currents and comparing it to rival paradigms such as Marxism, globalisation theory and postcolonial sociology. The book suggests that civilisational analysis offers an alternative approach to understanding globalisation, one that focuses on the dense engagement of societies, cultures, empires and civilisations in human history. Building on Castoriadis’s theory of social imaginaries, it argues that civilisations are best understood as the products of routine contacts and connections carried out by anonymous actors over the course of long periods of time. It illustrates this argument through case studies of modern Japan, the Pacific and post-Conquest Latin America (including the revival of indigenous civilisations), exploring discourses of civilisation outside the West within the context of growing Western imperial power.

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Schlagwörter

colonialism, contemporary civilisational analysis, Pacific cultures, Europe, human imaginaries, inter-civilisational engagement, capitalism, inter-societal encounters, early modernities, post-Cold War period, inter-cultural encounters, Latin America, political economy, Simon Bolivar, Japan, Ibn Khaldun, oceanian civilisation, islander experiences, George Pachymeres, collective memory