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Re: Modernity & Politics by Mark Douglas Whitaker 31 May 2003 02:14 UTC |
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Greetings, Lately I've become interested in the topic of the politics of modernity. Europeans, nationalists, settlers, and social scientists of all flavors have used this concept so often that we can state the obvious: "being modern" is the dominant self-image of those who rule, accumulate, and produce knowledge. The social science community is becoming more aware of this and excellent work is now being produced on this topic. These have asked "how modernity might not be what it purports to be or tells itself" (Lila Abu-Lughod). That is, the discourse around "being modern" is a political project that rather than emancipating and ushering in an age of progress is in fact implanted by European colonialists and local elites to enhance their social control over the multitude. But what I do not see much of is the question of why "being modern" may attract the attention of some lower but emerging sectors of our world: white working classes in the US, Zionist settlers in Palestine, some western feminists ... Partha Chaterjee, for instance, does an excellent job demonstrating how Indian nationalist elites used the discourse of modernity to rule and appropriate the technologies and science of the west while preserving the interior, domestic, spiritual realm. But what about other nationalist elites like Kemal Attaturk of Turkey or David Ben-Gurion of Israel who reached into the interior in an effort to purify the state from its "medieval" and "backward" past? More importantly, why do large sectors of such communities grap hold of this discourse, like Jewish European settlers? Does anyone know of any readings that deal with this topic? It doesn't have to be on Israel or Turkey. It could be global or micro. Thanks, Khaldoun __________________________________ Do you Yahoo!? The New Yahoo! Search - Faster. Easier. Bingo. http://search.yahoo.com
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