ebook img

Cores, Peripheries, and Globalization PDF

290 Pages·2011·3.404 MB·English
Save to my drive
Quick download
Download
Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.

Preview Cores, Peripheries, and Globalization

Cores, Cores, ABOUT Nelly Beku andpublicis CulturalPar ologyandis sityofWars CoverIllustra Edited by Peter Hanns Reill and Balázs A. Szelényi www.kirillgon Cores, PeriPheries, and Globalization i4 globalization.indb 1 2011.01.05. 10:35 i4 globalization.indb 2 2011.01.05. 10:35 Cores, PeriPheries, and Globalization Essays in Honor of Ivan T. Berend edited by Peter hanns reill and balázs a. szelényi Central european University Press budapest–new York i4 globalization.indb 3 2011.01.05. 10:35 © 2011 by Peter hanns reill and balázs a. szelényi Published in 2011 by Central european university press An imprint of the Central european University share Company nádor utca 11, h-1051 budapest, hungary Tel: +36-1-327-3138 or 327-3000 Fax: +36-1-327-3183 E-mail: [email protected] Website: www.ceupress.com 400 West 59th street, new York nY 10019, Usa Tel: +1-212-547-6932, Fax: +1-646-557-2416 E-mail: [email protected] all rights reserved. no part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, without the permission of the Publisher. isbn 978-615-5053-02-3 cloth library of Congress Cataloging-in-publiCation Data Cores, peripheries, and globalization : essays in honor of ivan berend / edited by Peter hanns reill and balázs a. szelényi. p. cm. includes bibliographical references and index. isbn 978-6155053023 (hardbound) 1. Globalization. 2. regional disparities. 3. regional economics. 4. dependency. 5. neoliberalism. i. berend, iván. ii. reill, Peter hanns. iii. szelényi, balázs a. hF1365.C67 2011 337—dc22 2010051859 Printed in hungary by akaprint Kft., budapest i4 globalization.indb 4 2011.01.05. 10:35 table of Contents Preface and acknowledgements ......................... vii introduction........................................ 1 section 1: oriGins and theoretiCal disCUssions oF Core-PeriPherY relations ................... 13 ChaPter 1: the latin american Contribution to Center–Periphery Perspectives: history and Prospect, Joseph L. Love ........... 15 ChaPter 2: From Plantation to Plant: slavery, the slave trade, and the industrial revolution, Jean Batou.................. 43 ChaPter 3: theories and realities: What are the Causes of backwardness? DanieL Chirot.......................... 63 ChaPter 4: development Possible? Possible developments: a research agenda, immanueL WaLLerstein................ 73 section 2: FroM the eUroPean PeriPherY to the Core and baCK ............................. 85 ChaPter 5: between Center and Periphery, eugene WeBer..... 87 ChaPter 6: Core, Periphery, and Civil society, Jürgen KoCKa...................................... 97 ChaPter 7: Conceptions and Constructions: east Central europe in economic history, heLga sChuLz................ 113 ChaPter 8: liberal economic nationalism in eastern europe during the First Wave of Globalization (1860–1914), thomas DaviD and eLisaBeth spiLman ................... 127 i4 globalization.indb 5 2011.01.05. 10:35 ChaPter 9: the rise and the Fall of the second Bildungsbürgertum, iván szeLényi ........................ 165 section 3: Globalization: its historY, natUre and ProbleMs........................... 183 ChaPter 10: Globalization, Core, and Periphery in the World economy of the late Middle ages and early Modern times, herman van Der Wee ................................ 185 ChaPter 11: the Pre-history of Core–Periphery, roBert Brenner . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 203 ChaPter 12: Globalization and its impact on Core–Periphery relations: Characteristics of Globalization, ivan t. BerenD...... 233 ChaPter 13: From West european to World science: seventeenth–twentieth Centuries, eriC J. hoBsBaWm.......... 255 notes on Contributors ................................ 271 index of names and Places ............................. 275 i4 globalization.indb 6 2011.01.05. 10:35 Preface and acknowledgements this volume honoring ivan t. berend had its origins in a two day con- ference organized by robert brenner, Peter reill and balázs szelényi to celebrate Prof. berend’s 75th birthday. From there it grew into the present volume after the editors thought it worthwhile to expand the scope of the conference and invite other eminent scholars to contribute to the volume. the response was great and the new essays did much to expand the topics covered in the conference and to include other and sometimes competing scholarly positions and approaches. the origi- nal conference was organized by UCla’s Center for seventeenth- and eighteenth-Century studies with help from UCla’s Center for euro- pean and eurasian studies. it was held at UCla’s William andrews Clark Memorial library. the editors would like to thank the very help- ful staff of the Center for seventeenth and eighteenth-Century studies and the Clark library who helped make the conference a great suc- cess. We also would like to recognize the outstanding editorial work provided to us by ellen Wilson, whose suggestions were always to the point. she helped enormously to shape the volume. Finally, we would like to acknowledge the major role played in publishing the volume by the Central european University Press and especially by linda Kunos who served as our point person in the book’s publication. CeU Press responded quickly to our proposal, read the manuscript carefully and quickly and produced it with dispatch and elegance. though the con- ference celebrated ivan berend at 75, the publication will appear as he is about to turn 80. it is our small way of saying thank you to a major scholar of the modern period. Peter hanns reill balázs szelényi i4 globalization.indb 7 2011.01.05. 10:35 i4 globalization.indb 8 2011.01.05. 10:35 introduction over the past few years, globalization has become an extremely con- tentious concept, capable of fomenting violent discussion and even po- litical action as the protests and riots at meetings of the World trade organization and the european Union have demonstrated. though generating much heat, the concept itself is vague, with often contradic- tory meanings. What is globalization? When did it begin? What gov- erns the relations between economic and social units within a global- ized system and how can these relations be determined? to what ex- tent is globalization a product of unchecked capitalism? Can globaliza- tion’s negative effects be alleviated by modifications within capitalism or not? if not, then by whom will needed modifications be introduced and what form will they take? these are just some of the questions that perplex those who seek an understanding of the phenomenon, an understanding which obviously has direct policy and political implica- tions. the essays in this volume cannot give direct answers to these questions. they do, however, place the debate in a broader and more vital context that locates globalization within an analysis of its essential dynamics—economic, social, political, and cultural—between metro- politan areas and their peripheries. as herman van der Wee remarks in his essay: “‘Core’ and ‘periphery,’ considered in economic terms, are more complex than ‘globalization.’ they are linked with the concepts of ‘dependence’ and ‘interdependence,’ ‘equality’ and ‘inequality.’” research on cores and peripheries has centered on the central question of the nature of relations between developed areas and na- tions, underdeveloped ones, and others that sometimes are called emerging. the possible answers have been bracketed and influenced by two contrasting “master” narratives of societal and economic de- velopment, one derived from contemporary interpretations of adam smith’s economic philosophy, usually labeled neo-liberalism, the other inspired by concepts drawn from Marxist philosophy and called depen- dency theory. i4 globalization.indb 1 2011.01.05. 10:35

See more

The list of books you might like

Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.