Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 288
Trim: 6¼ x 9¼
978-0-7425-2544-3 • Hardback • December 2003 • $126.00 • (£97.00)
978-0-7425-2545-0 • Paperback • December 2003 • $49.00 • (£38.00)
978-1-4175-0353-7 • eBook • October 2004 • $46.50 • (£36.00)
Manfred B. Steger is professor of global and transnational sociology at the University of Hawai'i at Mānoa. He is also an adjunct professor of global studies at Western Sydney University.
Chapter 1 I Introduction: Rethinking the Ideological Dimensions of Globalization
Part 2 I Globalism
Chapter 3 II Ideologies and the Globalization Agenda
Chapter 4 III The Matrix of Global Enchantment
Chapter 5 IV The End of Capitalist Globalization
Chapter 6 V Global Containment: The Production of Feminist Invisibility and the Vanishing Horizon of Justice
Chapter 7 VI Ideology and Globalization: From Globalism and Environmentalism to Ecoglobalism
Chapter 8 VII Globalizing Militaries
Part 9 II Antiglobalism
Chapter 10 VIII Ideology in the Age of Digital Reproduction
Chapter 11 IX Globalization: Ideology and Materiality
Chapter 12 X Anti-Capitalist Convergence? Anarchism, Socialism, and the Global Justice Movement
Chapter 13 XI Globalization and the New Realism of Human Rights
Part 14 III Globalism in a Global Context
Chapter 15 XII Globalization and National Development: Futurism and Nostalgia in Contemporary Political Economic Thinking
Chapter 16 XIII Globalization and Africa's Intellectual Engagements
Chapter 17 XIV Emergent Globalism and Ideological Change in Post-Revolutionary China
Chapter 18 XV "Antiglobalism Globalization" in East Asia: Statist versus Societal
Chapter 19 XVI Kozo Kaikaku: The Emergence of Neoliberal Globalization Discourse in Japan
Chapter 20 XVII Global Order and the Historical Structures of Dar-al-Islam
Chapter 21 XVIII The Emperor's Map: Latin American Critiques of Globalism
Chapter 22 XIX Globalization in Hawai'i: The Promise of Globalism and the Reality of Capitalism
Rethinking Globalism assembles stimulating diverse critical understandings of the ideological aspects of contemporary globalization, pointing us toward the sorts of transdisciplinary and intercultural engagements that global studies sorely need.
— Jan Aart Scholte, Professor of Global Studies, University of Gothenburg
The book serves well both as a meeting ground for a series of diverse political and methodological perspectives on dominant globalisms and as an appetiser for further work to come.
— Political Studies Review
A much-needed set of critical analyses of the dominant narratives about globalization by authors who recognize the existence of various global conditions. They deconstruct the content and orientation of these ideological accounts, and they recognize that work of critical analysis brings with it normative visions. Rethinking Globalism should be required reading for students of globalization.
— Saskia Sassen, author of The Global City
TEXT FEATURES
Includes Post-9/11 analysis of globalism
Accessibly written-ideal for adoption in advanced undergraduate courses and graduate seminars
Focuses on the ideological dimensions of globalization
Crosses many disciplines
Represents truly global scholarship on the subject with a contributor list composed of well-known academics who come from all five continents