ABSTRACT
This book proposes a New Enlightenment – a new way of looking at the non-Western world. Breaking new ground, the essays chart a course beyond Eurocentric discourses (which completely ignore the contributions of Asia, Africa and Latin-America) and forms of nativism (which are usually ethnocentric discourses).
The volume:
- Focuses on the historical aspects of knowledge-production and its colonization;
- Examines the genre of multilinear histories that displaces hegemonic Eurocentric discourses;
- Enlarges the scope of multilinear historicism whereby Asia, Europe, Africa and the Americas are drawn in a new humanistic knowledge system;
- Studies how colonization is resisted in both the non-Western and Western world.
Lucid and engaging, this book will be of great interest to scholars and researchers of social theory, education, politics and public policy.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part I|55 pages
Reflections on history
chapter 1|22 pages
Beyond unilinear evolutionism
Rethinking Marx’s relevance for the non-Western world
part II|68 pages
Decolonizing education
part III|48 pages
Inequality and the logic of exclusion
part IV|39 pages
Philosophy, culture and politics
chapter 12|12 pages
Democracy and the paranoiac strategy of pseudo-threats
Knowledge, law and violence in light of Walter Benjamin’s ‘Critique of Violence’