European Universalism: The Rhetoric of Power
By (Author) Immanuel Wallerstein
The New Press
The New Press
7th September 2006
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Sociology and anthropology
320.5
Paperback
112
Width 134mm, Height 204mm
127g
Wallerstein argues that Western intervention around the world has been justified by appeals to notions of civilisation, development and progress, that originate from sixteenth century debates on the ethics of the Spanish conquest of the Americas. This book argues that four basic assumptions have been used to justify all subsequent 'interventions' by the 'civilized' into 'non-civilized' zones: the barbarity of others; violations of universal values; defense of innocents amoungst cruel others; and the spreading of universal values. Overshadowing the material benefits of conquest, and legitimising the build-up of military power, these arguments are portrayed as universal, encrusted in natural law and the justification for the west's self-imposed civilising mission. But, as Immanuel Wallerstein advances in this short and elegant philippic, these concepts are, in fact, not universal. 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 smokescreen of what is supposed to be both beneficial to humankind and historically inevitable. 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 centre stage of world politics, his treatise is both relevant and compelling.
Wallerstein's ideas are compelling, a new explanation, a new classification, indeed a revolutionary one, of received knowledge and current thought.Fernand Braudel
Lucid, informed, and insightful.The New York Times
A prolific, provocative, 'big-picture' theorist.Booklist
Immanuel Wallerstein is a senior research scholar in the department of sociology at Yale University and director emeritus of the Fernand Braudel Centre at Binghamton University. He is also a resident researcher at the Maison des Sciences de l'Homme in Paris. His many books include The Modern World - System, Historical Capitalism, After Liberalism, The Decline of American Power and a collection of his work that appears as The Essential Wallerstein.