Lexington Books
Pages: 318
Trim: 6¼ x 9⅜
978-0-7391-9948-0 • Hardback • February 2015 • $133.00 • (£102.00)
978-0-7391-9949-7 • eBook • February 2015 • $126.00 • (£97.00)
Sven Trakulhun is lecturer of history at the Universities of Zurich and Konstanz.
Ralph Weber is assistant professor for European Global Studies at the University of Basel.
Part I. Globalization and the Rethinking of Modernity
Chapter 1: ‘Of Other Worlds to Come,' Pheng Cheah
Chapter 2: What is ‘Modernities’ a Plural of? – A Rhetorical Analysis of Some Recent Uses, Ralph Weber
Chapter 3: Varieties of Modernity? Conceptual Prerequisites and Empirical Observations, Volker H. Schmidt
Chapter 4: The Origins of the Social Sciences and the Problem of Conceptualizing ‘Modernity’/’Modernities,’ Wolfgang Knöbl
Part II. Sites of Revision, Ways of Revisioning
Chapter 5: Waiting for the Simorgh: Comparisons, Connections, and the ‘Early Modern,’ Sanjay Subrahmanyam
Chapter 6: Early Modernity as Cosmopolis: Some Suggestions from Southeast Asia, Anthony Reid
Chapter 7: Revisioning Modernity: Modernity in Eurasian Perspectives, Arif Dirlik
Chapter 8: New Historicism and Chinese Modernity: Multiple Mythologies Revisited, Andrea Riemenschnitter
Chapter 9: Making Modern Muslims: Islamic Reform, Hasan al-Banna, and the Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood, Gudrun Krämer
Chapter 10: Dilemmas of Development: Dr. Krisana Kraisintu’s Praxis in Asia and Africa, Tamara Loos
In the current global conjuncture, claims on modernity are proliferating, and we witness increasingly contested debates about early and multiple modernities, and about visions of development outside the frame of Euro-American epistemologies. In this anthology, a group of distinguished scholars offers a wealth of insights and critical perspectives, aiming both at assessing the meaning of these interventions, and to reconfigure the notion of "modernity" for our times.
— Sebastian Conrad, Freie Universität Berlin
In this interdisciplinary and international collection of essays, delimiting modernities becomes a twofold project: on the one hand, consolidating as well as complicating the use of a pluralized notion of modernity; on the other hand, further provincializing the Eurocentric conceptual history of modernity in ways that reflect ongoing global assymmetries of power. The result is a far-reaching exploration of a timely subject by some of the best scholars in the field
— Manuela Boatcă, professor of sociology, Albert-Ludwigs University of Freiburg, author, Global Inequalities Beyond Occidentalism