Lexington Books
Pages: 216
Trim: 6½ x 9½
978-0-7391-3571-6 • Hardback • September 2009 • $125.00 • (£96.00)
Andrew Davison and Himadeep Muppidi have been in conversation since their graduate school days at the University of Minnesota and are colleagues in the department of political science at Vassar College in Poughkeepsie, New York. Professor Davison's works include The Philosophic Roots of Modern Ideology: Liberalism, Communism, Fascism, and Islamism, and Secularism and Revivalism in Turkey: A Hermeneutic Reconsideration. Professor Muppidi's works include The Politics of the Global.
Chapter 1 Openings
Part 2 Part One. Philosophical (Re)Considerations
Chapter 3 Chapter One. Teaching Continually: Beginning with Lévinas
Chapter 4 Chapter Two. Hegel as a Colonial, Anti-Colonial, and Post-Colonial Thinker
Chapter 5 Chapter Three. Jacques Derrida, The Last European
Chapter 6 Chapter Four. Europe and Its Boundaries: Toward a Global Hermeneutic Political Theory
Part 7 Part Two. Other Words and Worlds
Chapter 8 Chapter Five. Interpreting Europe through the Parthenon Marbles
Chapter 9 Chapter Six. The Mapping of Empire: Evolving Notions of Christendom and Europe in the Poetry of Fernando de Herrera Commemorating the Battle of Lepanto
Chapter 10 Chapter Seven. Valley of the Fallen: Tales from the Crypt
Chapter 11 Chapter Eight. Orhan Pamuk'sSnow: Re-imagining the Boundaries between East and West, Art and Politics
Chapter 12 Chapter Nine. Zoological Relations
Chapter 13 Chapter Ten. Borders, Power, and Resistance: Bounding and Challenging Europe
Chapter 14 Chapter Eleven. Securing the Absent Nation: Colonial Governance in the New World Order
Pursuing Dipesh Chakrabarty's argument in Provincializing Europe, this volume explores the intrinsic ambivalence of Europe: its 'indispensable' status as a source of universal horizons and its simultaneous 'inadequacy' due to its hegemonic policies and agendas. Probing the continent's intimate connection with colonialism, anti-colonialism, post-colonialism, and cosmopolitanism, the authors show that Europe can only find itself by losing itself in robust dialogue with other cultures and traditions. An important contribution to cross-cultural and post-colonial studies.
— Fred Dallmayr, University of Notre Dame
This collection of original, thoughtful, and sometimes absolutely brilliant essays questions and extends the project of 'provincializing Europe' in novel and unanticipated ways. By discussing in depth both European ideas and identities and their entanglement in the histories of peoples once dominated by European empires, the essays assembled here manage to insert the question of colonialism right at the heart of today's discussions about the boundaries of Europe.
— Dipesh Chakrabarty, University of Chicago
The essays in Europe and its Boundaries explore with great imagination and intelligence the project of provincializing Europe, illuminating the possibilities for a more ethical and more critical scholarly and pedagogical practice.
— Timothy Mitchell, Columbia University
Europe and Its Boundaries offers a timely caution as political and social theorists aim to produce global theory. If political and social theory is to be global (or at least comparative), it needs to slow down and cultivate the skills necessary for thinking beyond Europe's colonial relationship to others. These compelling essays are a wonderful place to begin, confronting us with the interpretive problems and possibilities of thinking “Europe” and “European thought” as a moment in a dialogical process.
— David Blaney, Professor of Political Science, Macalester College, USA