ABSTRACT

Gerard Delanty offers a critical interpretation of the European heritage today in light of recent developments in the human and social sciences, and in view of a mood of crisis in Europe that compels us to re-think the European past. One of the main insights informing this book is that a transnational and global perspective on European history can reorient the European heritage in a direction that offers a more viable way for contemporary Europe to articulate an intercultural identity in keeping with the emerging shape of Europe, and with its own often acknowledged past. He argues that the European heritage is based less on a universalistic conception of culture than on a plurality of interconnecting narratives. Such a perspective opens up new directions for scholarship and public debate on heritage that are guided by critical cosmopolitan considerations that highlight contention, resistances, competition, and dissonance. He argues that the specificity of the European dimension of culture is in the entanglement of many cultures rather than in an original culture. The cultures of Europe are not separated but have been shaped in close interaction with each other and with the non-European world. Nations are not therefore unique, exceptional, or fundamentally different from each other. The outcome of such intermingling is a multiplicity of ideas of Europe that serve as shared cultural reference points.

chapter 1|26 pages

Introduction

The past in the present

part I|58 pages

Making sense of a transnational world

chapter 3|22 pages

Modernity and the plurality of Europe

chapter 4|18 pages

Europe unbounded

Critical cosmopolitanism and the problem of Eurocentrism

part II|90 pages

Encounters, routes, transfers, and entanglements

part III|47 pages

Looking to the future

chapter 10|15 pages

Making sense of Brexit

A divided nation in a divided Europe

chapter 11|17 pages

Europe beyond the crisis

Re-inventing the European heritage