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Global Modernities
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Global Modernities

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August 1995 | 304 pages | SAGE Publications Ltd
How do global processes affect personal and social consciousness? What interplay exists between local and global forces? In Global Modernities, a stellar cast of contributors--including Zygmunt Bauman, Jonathan Friedman, Ann Game, and Göran Therborn--offer superb commentary and analysis on the interplay between the local and the global across a broad range of areas. Focusing on two major themes--social theory and social change--contributors provide powerful critiques of previous positions on the study of modernity that have tended to prioritize history. They argue for a self-reflexive approach to modernity, stressing the fluid character of interdependence and movement. Identity, memory, association, and practice are viewed as nonreducible to the nation-state. Similarly, the western path of social development is subjected to principled criticism.

Mike Featherstone and Scott Lash
Globalization, Modernity and the Spatialization of Social Theory
An Introduction

 
Roland Robertson
Glocalization
Time-Space and Homogeneity-Heterogeneity

 
Jan Nederveen Pieterse
Globalization as Hybridization
Jonathan Friedman
Global System, Globalization and the Parameters of Modernity
Timothy W Luke
New World Order or Neo-World Orders
Power, Politics and Ideology in Informationalizing Glocalities

 
Anthony D King
The Times and Spaces of Modernity (or Who Needs Postmodernism?)
G[um]oran Therborn
Routes to/through Modernity
Zygmunt Bauman
Searching for a Centre that Holds
Michael Dillon
Security, Philosophy and Politics
Benno Wagner
Normality - Exception - Counter-knowledge
On the History of a Modern Fascination

 
Ann Game
Time, Space, Memory with Reference to Bachelard
Oleg Kharkhordin
The Soviet Individual
Genealogy of a Dissimulating Animal

 
Vikki Bell
Bio-politics and the Spectre of Incest
Sexuality and/in the Family

 
Eli Zaretsky
The Birth of Identity Politics in the 1960s
Psychoanalysis and the Public/Private Division

 
Eugene Halton
The Modern Error
Or, the Unbearable Enlightenment of Being