"The Present as History" is a rare opportunity to hear
world-renowned scholars speak on the new imperialism, feminism and
human rights, secularism and Islam, post-colonialism, and the
global economy. They treat the United States as an object to be
historically and politically interrogated rather than as the norm
from which all else is to be evaluated and assess the Third World
through its history of colonialism and neocolonialism rather than
focusing on issues of culture and morality.
Amartya Sen discusses the shortcomings of the development agenda
as it was conceived at the close of the Second World War, while
Joseph Stiglitz explains economic globalization and the power of
the International Monetary Fund in guiding its trajectory. Sanjay
Reddy argues that global poverty estimates are flawed, and Helena
Norberg-Hodge uses her experience in Tibet to lay bare the problems
with development practice.
Political scientists Partha Chatterjee, Mahmood Mamdani, and
Anatol Lieven chart the growth of hegemonic power from the colonial
to the postcolonial period. Chatterjee examines the enduring
effects of colonial administrative and governing practices, while
Mamdani, focusing on the present global dispensation, explains the
growth of terrorist movements around the world in the context of
the Cold War. Lieven looks at the different strains of American
nationalism and the continuities and ruptures between
nineteenth-century empires and the present one. Iranian human
rights lawyer Shirin Ebadi elaborates the relationship between
Islam, democracy, and human rights while anthropologists Lila
Abu-Lughod and Saba Mahmood respectively trace the historical use
of women as an excuse for imperial intervention and discuss the
relationship between liberalism, Islam, and secularism. Literary
theorist and cultural critic Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak looks at
the legacy of colonialism in the domain of language and education,
and isolates the problems associated with human rights discourse
and practice.
In conclusion, Talal Asad traces the genealogy of the term
secularism, the special place of Islam within it, and its
relationship to modernity. Gil Anidjar considers the distinction
between religion and politics and elaborates the historical links
between secularism and Christianity. Taken together, these
interviews offer a valuable understanding of world history and a
corrective to predominant conventional discourses on global power
and justice.
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