ABSTRACT

Too often, observers of globalization take for granted that the common ground across cultures is a thin layer of consumerism and perhaps human rights. If so, then anything deeper and more traditional would be placebound, and probably destined for the dustbin of history. But must this be so? Must we assume--as both liberals and traditionalists now tend to do--that one cannot be a cosmopolitan and take traditions seriously at the same time? This book offers a radically different argument about how traditions and global citizenship can meet, and suggests some important lessons for the contours of globalization in our own time.

Adam K. Webb argues that if we look back before modernity, we find a very different line of thinking about what it means to take the whole world as one’s horizon. Digging into some fascinating currents of thought and practice in the ancient world, the Middle Ages, and the early modern period, across all major civilizations, Webb is able to reveal patterns of "deep cosmopolitanism", with its logic quite unlike that of liberal globalization today. In their more cosmopolitan moments, everyone from clerics to pilgrims to empire-builders was inclined to look for deep ethical parallels—points of contact—among civilizations and traditions. Once modernity swept aside the old civilizations, however, that promise was largely forgotten. We now have an impoverished view of what it means to embrace a tradition and even what kinds of conversations across traditions are possible. In part two, Webb draws out the lessons of deep cosmopolitanism for our own time. If revived, it has something to say about everything from the rise of new non-Western powers like China and India and what they offer the world, to religious tolerance, to global civil society, to cross-border migration.

Deep Cosmopolis traces an alternative strand of cosmopolitan thinking that cuts across centuries and civilizations. It advances a new perspective on world history, and a distinctive vision of globalization for this century which has the real potential to resonate with us all.

chapter 1|13 pages

Circuits of the Sacred

chapter 142|17 pages

Civilisation with a Capital C

chapter 323|11 pages

Beyond the Frontiers

chapter 444|13 pages

The World Religions

chapter 585|7 pages

Mediæval Mirrors and the Virtuous Outsider

chapter 666|19 pages

Strutting on the Stage of Empires

chapter 1048|13 pages

Modernity's Derailments

chapter 1189|17 pages

Globalisation and New Landscapes of Power

chapter 13610|15 pages

Relearning How to Talk Across Traditions

chapter 15211|15 pages

Interreligious Dialogue and Its Limits

chapter 16812|13 pages

Homelands and Hospitality

chapter 18213|13 pages

World Citizens in the Making

chapter 19614|11 pages

Void or Cosmos?