'Modernity' and the Making of Social Order in Twentieth-Century Europe

被引:5
|
作者
Sweeney, Dennis [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Alberta, Dept Hist & Class, Edmonton, AB T6G 2H4, Canada
关键词
D O I
10.1017/S0960777314000137
中图分类号
K [历史、地理];
学科分类号
06 ;
摘要
It is hard not to be struck by the continuing interest in the concept of 'modernity' or 'the modern' for making sense of the economic, cultural and political transformations of twentieth-century Europe. Seemingly laid to rest by the early 1980s for its association with modernisation theory, modernity as a concept was revived during the late 1980s and 1990s largely by European historians working on countries, especially Germany and Russia, with nineteenth- and twentieth-century histories that modernisation theorists deemed models of developmental backwardness or case studies in the failure to modernise and its consequences. But, like its striking re-appearance in scholarship on those areas of the world - especially Asia and Africa - written off as the most irredeemably un-modern or 'traditional' by modernisation theorists, this renewed interest in modernity derives from very different interventions in post-structuralist theory and cultural and postcolonial studies, which have generated new definitions, and critiques 'modernity' and its 'dark side' from the vantage point of 'postmodernity'.
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页码:209 / 224
页数:16
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