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History after the three worlds (Post-eurocentric historiographies)

Autor Arif et al. Dirlik

Editorial ROWMAN & LITTLEFIELD

History after the three worlds (Post-eurocentric historiographies)
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  • Editorial ROWMAN & LITTLEFIELD
  • ISBN13 9780847693429
  • ISBN10 0847693422
  • Tipo Libro
  • Páginas 278
  • Año de Edición 2000
  • Encuadernación Rústica

History after the three worlds (Post-eurocentric historiographies)

Autor Arif et al. Dirlik

Editorial ROWMAN & LITTLEFIELD

-5% dto.    39,79€
37,80€
Ahorra 1,99€
No disponible, consulte disponibilidad
Envío gratis
España peninsular
Envío GRATUITO a partir de 19€

a España peninsular

Envíos en 24/48h

-5% dto en todos los libros

Recogida GRATUITA en Librería

¡Ven y déjate sorprender!

Detalles del libro

History as a discipline faces a crisis of identity as Eurocentrism fades in a world where globalized visions compete to explain historical processes. Facing the challenge squarely, this volume-comprising specialists on Asia, Africa, and Latin America-explores the state of historical analysis in various world regions and appraises current views on what defines and challenges historical knowledge. It is widely accepted that Eurocentrism no longer seem acceptable in a world where others are reasserting their own notions of past and future. The post-World War II spatialities that guided both historical analysis and the division of labor in historical work are in the process of disappearing into more globalized visions. Constituencies left out of history in the past are making demands for the recognition of their historical presence. History as epistemology is under attack as a marker of Eurocentric modernity from non-historical ways of thinking, as well as from ideologies of postmodernism that deny to history its claims to truth. Indeed, the current situation in the field has been described by one distinguished historian as a "cacophonous confusion." The challenge historians face is how to imagine new ways of writing history that overcome this confusion without falling back upon ideological and methodological prejudices that reproduce the problems of the past in new guises. The contributors discuss how these challenges are voiced and met in their different areas of specialization. Unsurprising in a volume that addresses a variety of regions and issues that are not only technically historiographical but also deeply cultural and political, the authors differ in their appraisal of thechallenges presented by globalization, postmodernism, or postcolonialism. Yet they are united in their recognition of the validity of historical ways of knowing and their reaffirmation of the importance of history in grasping contemporary cultural and political problems. It is because history is entangled in a Eurocentric modernity that in a postmodern world it provides the medium for articulating alternatives to Eurocentrism-and to history itself.

Author Biography: Arif Dirlik is professor of history at Duke University. Vinay Bahl is associate professor of sociology at the Pennsylvania College of Technology. Peter Gran is professor of history at Temple University.