The Theft of HistoryCambridge University Press, 2012年3月29日 In The Theft of History Jack Goody builds on his own previous work to extend further his highly influential critique of what he sees as the pervasive Eurocentric or occidentalist biases of so much western historical writing and the consequent 'theft' by the West of the achievements of other cultures in the invention of (notably) democracy, capitalism, individualism and love. Goody, one of the world's most distinguished anthropologists, raises questions about theorists, historians and methodology and proposes a new comparative approach to cross-cultural analysis which allows for more scope in examining history than an East versus West style. |
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第 1 到 5 筆結果,共 22 筆
第 7 頁
... the Durkheimian school of the Année sociologique came closest to achieving a satisfying programme. 18 Blaut 1993, 2000. 19 Frank 1998. 20 Pomeranz 2000. 21 Hobson 2004. 22 Fernandez-Armesto 1995. 23 Howard 2000, Brotton Introduction 7.
... the Durkheimian school of the Année sociologique came closest to achieving a satisfying programme. 18 Blaut 1993, 2000. 19 Frank 1998. 20 Pomeranz 2000. 21 Hobson 2004. 22 Fernandez-Armesto 1995. 23 Howard 2000, Brotton Introduction 7.
第 8 頁
... Fernandez-Armesto of the major states of Eurasia, treated as equals, over the last one thousand years.22 In addition, an increasing number of scholars of the Renaissance, such as the architectural historian Deborah Howard and the ...
... Fernandez-Armesto of the major states of Eurasia, treated as equals, over the last one thousand years.22 In addition, an increasing number of scholars of the Renaissance, such as the architectural historian Deborah Howard and the ...
第 13 頁
... Fernandez-Armesto 1995. 3 Goody 1968. 4 Makdisi 1981: 2. 13 Who stole what? Time and space.
... Fernandez-Armesto 1995. 3 Goody 1968. 4 Makdisi 1981: 2. 13 Who stole what? Time and space.
第 14 頁
... FernandezArmesto, includes in his scope studies of the history of Islam, India, China, Africa, and the Americas. He has written a world ... Fernandez-Armesto 1995. 3 Goody 1968. 4 Makdisi 1981: 2. 5 Goody 1998. 14 A socio-cultural genealogy.
... FernandezArmesto, includes in his scope studies of the history of Islam, India, China, Africa, and the Americas. He has written a world ... Fernandez-Armesto 1995. 3 Goody 1968. 4 Makdisi 1981: 2. 5 Goody 1998. 14 A socio-cultural genealogy.
第 18 頁
... looking west and a static, backward-looking east. Space Conceptions of space, too, have followed from European definitions. 7 Lewis 2002: 130–1. 8 Needham 1965. 9 Goody 2003b. 10 Fernandez-Armesto 1995: 110. 18 A socio-cultural genealogy.
... looking west and a static, backward-looking east. Space Conceptions of space, too, have followed from European definitions. 7 Lewis 2002: 130–1. 8 Needham 1965. 9 Goody 2003b. 10 Fernandez-Armesto 1995: 110. 18 A socio-cultural genealogy.
內容
1 | |
13 | |
26 | |
a transition to capitalism or the collapse | 68 |
Asiatic despots in Turkey or elsewhere? | 99 |
Science and civilization in Renaissance Europe | 125 |
Elias and Absolutist Europe | 154 |
Braudel and global comparison | 180 |
The theft ofinstitutions towns and universities | 215 |
humanism democracy | 240 |
References | 307 |
Index | 324 |
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常見字詞
achievements activity Africa agriculture ancient Ancient Greece Anderson 1974b Antiquity Arab argued Asia Asiatic behaviour bourgeoisie Braudel Bronze Age capitalism Carthage centres certainly China Chinese Christian cities claims classical commercial complex concept context continued culture democracy despotism discussion dominant earlier early east eastern economy Elias Elias’s elsewhere Elvin emergence empire especially Eurasia eurocentric European example exchange existed Fernandez-Armesto feudalism Finley freedom Ghana Goody Greece Greek growth historians human idea important India Industrial Revolution institutions invention Islam Italy kind later madrasa major manufacture Marx medieval Mediterranean mercantile merchants Mesopotamia modern science Muslim Needham nineteenth century notion ofthe Ottoman partly period Phoenician poetry political problem regimes religion religious Renaissance Roman romantic love Rome scholars secular seen silk similar slave social societies sociogenesis sphere teleological textiles tion towns trade tradition Turkey unique urban Weber western Europe world history writing