Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Editor's preface
- Introduction: Marshall G. S. Hodgson and world history
- Part I Europe in a global context
- 1 The interrelations of societies in history
- 2 In the center of the map: Nations see themselves as the hub of history
- 3 World history and a world outlook
- 4 The great Western Transmutation
- 5 Historical method in civilizational studies
- 6 On doing world history
- Part II Islam in a global context
- Part III The discipline of world history
- Conclusion: Islamic history as world history: Marshall G.S. Hodgson and The Venture of Islam
1 - The interrelations of societies in history
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 18 December 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Editor's preface
- Introduction: Marshall G. S. Hodgson and world history
- Part I Europe in a global context
- 1 The interrelations of societies in history
- 2 In the center of the map: Nations see themselves as the hub of history
- 3 World history and a world outlook
- 4 The great Western Transmutation
- 5 Historical method in civilizational studies
- 6 On doing world history
- Part II Islam in a global context
- Part III The discipline of world history
- Conclusion: Islamic history as world history: Marshall G.S. Hodgson and The Venture of Islam
Summary
It has been long pointed out that the destinies of the various sections of mankind began to be interrelated long before the twentieth century, with its global wars and cold wars; or even the nineteenth century, the century of European world hegemony. Here we will study certain of the historical ways in which these destinies were intertwined; in this way we may distinguish more valid modes of tracing large-scale history and of comparing the societies involved in it, from a number of popular but unsound modes of trying to do so. I shall speak mostly of the ages before modern times, noting only briefly at the end of the paper certain crucial ways in which modern interrelations among human societies have been different from earlier ones.
The geographical world-image of the West
It would be a significant story in itself to trace how modern Westerners have managed to preserve some of the most characteristic features of their ethnocentric medieval image of the world. Recast in modern scientific and scholarly language, the image is still with us; indeed, all sorts of scholarly arguments are used to bolster it against occasional doubts. The point of any ethnocentric world image is to divide the world into moieties, ourselves and the others, ourselves forming the more important of the two. To be fully satisfying, such an image must be at once historical and geographical.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Rethinking World HistoryEssays on Europe, Islam and World History, pp. 3 - 28Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1993
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