How ideas such as civilization and progress have been
used as a smoke screen for western dominance, by the
world-renowned sociologist. Ever since the
Enlightenment, Western intervention around the world has
been justified by appeals to notions of civilization,
development, and progress. The assumption has been that
such ideas are universal, encrusted in natural law. But,
as Immanuel Wallerstein argues in this short and elegant
philippic, these concepts are, in fact, not global.
Rather, their genesis is firmly rooted in European
thought and their primary function has been to provide
justification for powerful states to impose their will
against the weak under the smoke screen of what is
supposed to be both beneficial to humankind and
historically inevitable. With great acuity Wallerstein
draws together discussions of the idea of orientalism,
the right to intervene, and the triumph of science over
the humanities to explain how strategies designed to
promote particular Western interests have acquired an
all-inclusive patina. Wallerstein concludes by
advocating a true universalism that will allow critical
appraisal of all justifications for intervention by the
powerful against the weak. At a time when such
intervention--in the name of democracy and human
rights--has returned to the center stage of world
politics, his treatise is both relevant and
compelling. |
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