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The European Union, we are told, is facing extinction. Most of
those who believe that, however, have no understanding of how, and
why, it became possible to imagine that the diverse peoples of
Europe might be united in a single political community. The Pursuit
of Europe tells the story of the evolution of the 'European
project', from the end of the Napoleonic Wars, which saw the
earliest creation of a 'Concert of Europe', right through to
Brexit. The question was how, after centuries of internecine
conflict, to create a united Europe while still preserving the
political legal and cultural integrity of each individual nation.
The need to find an answer to this question became more acute after
two world wars had shown that if the nations of Europe were to
continue to play a role in the world they could now only do so
together. To achieve that, however, they had to be prepared to
merge their zealously-guarded sovereign powers into a new form of
trans-national constitutionalism. This, the European Union has
tried to do. Here, Anthony Pagden argues that it has created not as
its enemies have claimed, a 'super-state' but a new post-national
order united in a political life based, not upon the old
shibboleths of nationalism and patriotism, but upon a common body
of values and aspirations. It is this, argues Pagden, that will
allow the Union to defeat its political enemies from within, and to
overcome the difficulties, from mass migration to the pandemic,
which it faces from without. But it will only succeed in doing so
if it also continues to evolve as it has over the past two
centuries.
Despite the long history of debate and the recent resurgence of
interest in empires and imperialism, no one seems very clear as to
what exactly an empire is. The Burdens of Empire strives to offer
not only a definition but also a working description. This book
examines how empires were conceived by those who ruled them and
lived under them; it looks at the relations, real or imagined,
between the imperial metropolis (when one existed) and its outlying
provinces or colonies; and it asks how the laws that governed the
various parts and various ethnic groups, of which all empires were
made, were conceived and interpreted. Anthony Pagden argues that
the evolution of the modern concept of the relationship between
states, and in particular the modern conception of international
law, cannot be understood apart from the long history of European
empire building.
This book addresses the question of what it means, and has meant, to be "European," covering the period from Antiquity to the end of the twentieth century. The essays discuss questions of politics, law, religion, culture, literature, and even affectivity in a broad account of how a distinctive European identity has grown over the centuries and its place in the future evolution of the European Union. In the massive literature of European integration, no other book takes such a long historical perspective, and none other deals directly with the question of identity.
This book addresses the question of what it means, and has meant, to be "European," covering the period from Antiquity to the end of the twentieth century. The essays discuss questions of politics, law, religion, culture, literature, and even affectivity in a broad account of how a distinctive European identity has grown over the centuries and its place in the future evolution of the European Union. In the massive literature of European integration, no other book takes such a long historical perspective, and none other deals directly with the question of identity.
Francisco Vitoria was the earliest and arguably the most important of the Thomist philosophers of the counter-Reformation. His works are of great importance for an understanding of both the rise of modern absolutism, and the debate about the emergent imperialism of the European powers, and are unusually accessible since they survive in the form of summaries of his lecture courses on law and theology. Translated here into English for the first time, these texts comprise the core of Vitoria's thought, and are accompanied by a comprehensive introduction, chronology, and bibliography.
This book gives a new interpretation of the reception of the new
world by the old. It is the first in-depth study of the
pre-Enlightenment methods by which Europeans attempted to describe
and classify the American Indian and his society. Between 1512 and
1724 a simple determinist view of human society was replaced by a
more sophisticated relativist approach. Anthony Pagden uses new
methods of technical analysis, already developed in philosophy and
anthropology, to examine four groups of writers who analysed Indian
culture: the sixteenth-century theologian, Francisco de Vitoria,
and his followers; the 'champion of the Indians' Bartolome de Las
Casas; and the Jesuit historians Jose de Acosta and Joseph Francois
Lafitau. Dr Pagden explains the sources for their theories and how
these conditioned their observations. He also examines for the
first time the key terms in each writer's vocabulary - words such
as 'barbarian' and 'civil' - and the assumptions that lay beneath
them.
Despite the long history of debate and the recent resurgence of
interest in empires and imperialism, no one seems very clear as to
what exactly an empire is. The Burdens of Empire strives to offer
not only a definition but also a working description. This book
examines how empires were conceived by those who ruled them and
lived under them; it looks at the relations, real or imagined,
between the imperial metropolis (when one existed) and its outlying
provinces or colonies; and it asks how the laws that governed the
various parts and various ethnic groups, of which all empires were
made, were conceived and interpreted. Anthony Pagden argues that
the evolution of the modern concept of the relationship between
states, and in particular the modern conception of international
law, cannot be understood apart from the long history of European
empire building.
This volume studies the concept of a political ‘language’, of a discourse composed of shared vocabularies, idioms and rhetorical strategies, which has been widely influential on recent work in the history of political thought. The collection brings together a number of essays by a distinguished group of international scholars, on the four dominant languages in use in Europe between the end of the fourteenth and the beginning of the nineteenth century. They are: the language of political Aristotelianism and the natural law; the language of classical republicanism; the language of commerce and the commercial society; and the language of a science of politics. Each author has chosen a single aspect of his or her language, sometimes the work of a single author, in one case the history of a single team, and shown how it determined the shape and development of that language, and the extent to which each language was a response to the challenge of other modes of discourse.
. . . a pioneer reconnaissance of the notion of colonial identity
in the post-Columbian world.--B. W. Higman, The Journal of American
History It is these creoles, colonials' as opposed to the
colonised, ' who form the subjects of Canny and Pagden's
intelligent new book. In its compact pages we watch the {colonials}
attempting to work out who' and just how new/old' they were during
centuries unhaunted by the spectre of nationalism.--Benedict
Anderson, London Review of Books The prolonged death throes of
Europe's last overseas empires have stimulated a lively historical
interest in the roots of decolonialization. The theme is taken up
in this elegantly written and admirably edited volume in which
Nicholas Canny and Anthony Pagden bring together a team of
specialists to examine how, in the major Atlantic empires prior to
the independence movements of the late eighteenth and early
nineteenth centuries, colonies came to see themselves as possessing
their own particular characteristics, and the bearing this had on
those revolutions. . . . The editors and contributors are to be
congratulated on this rich and rewarding book, essential reading
for anyone interested in imperial history.--Geoffrey Scammell, The
Times Higher Education Supplement
No work is a stronger, more exacting, heartbreaking record of the Spanish atrocities in the genocidal enterprise of colonization in the Americas. This account provides an eyewitness’s history of the process in the territory of Columbus.
Hernan Cortes's Cartas de Relacion, written over a seven-year
period to Charles V of Spain, provide an extraordinary narrative
account of the conquest of Mexico from the founding of the coastal
town of Veracruz until Cortes's journey to Honduras in 1525.
Pagden's English translation has been prepared from a close
examination of the earliest surviving manuscript and of the first
printed editions, and he also provides a new introduction offering
a bold and innovative interpretation of the nature of the conquest
and Cortes's involvement in it. J. H. Elliot's introductory essay
explains Cortes's conflicts with the Crown and with Diego
Velazquez, the governor of Cuba. "The definitive edition [of the
letters] in any language. . . . The book is a 'must' for all those
who are seriously interested in this traumatic clash of
civilizations and the consequences, both for good and ill, which
ensued."-C. R. Boxer, English Historical Review "One of the most
fascinating Machiavellian documents to come out of the
Renaissance."-Carlos Fuentes, Guardian "[Pagden] provides us with
two important innovations: the first reliable edition of the most
important Spanish text . . . and annotations that draw on Pagden's
own profound knowledge of Mesoamerican cultures."-Helen Nader,
Sixteenth Century Journal
The Enlightenment and Why It Still Matters tells nothing less than
the story of how the modern, Western view of the world was born.
Cultural and intellectual historian Anthony Pagden explains how,
and why, the ideal of a universal, global, and cosmopolitan society
became such a central part of the Western imagination in the
ferment of the Enlightenment - and how these ideas have done battle
with an inward-looking, tradition-oriented view of the world ever
since. Cosmopolitanism is an ancient creed; but in its modern form
it was a creature of the Enlightenment attempt to create a new
'science of man', based upon a vision of humanity made up of
autonomous individuals, free from all the constraints imposed by
custom, prejudice, and religion. As Pagden shows, this 'new
science' was based not simply on 'cold, calculating reason', as its
critics claimed, but on the argument that all humans are linked by
what in the Enlightenment were called 'sympathetic' attachments.
The conclusion was that despite the many tribes and nations into
which humanity was divided there was only one 'human nature', and
that the final destiny of the species could only be the creation of
one universal, cosmopolitan society. This new 'human science'
provided the philosophical grounding of the modern world. It has
been the inspiration behind the League of Nations, the United
Nations and the European Union. Without it, international law,
global justice, and human rights legislation would be unthinkable.
As Anthony Pagden argues passionately and persuasively in this
book, it is a legacy well worth preserving - and one that might yet
come to inherit the earth.
For more than three centuries after Columbus's voyages to America,
Europeans pondered how the Old World's encounters with the New
World affected European sensibilities and intellectual horizons. In
this book Anthony Pagden examines some of the varied ways in which
Europeans interpreted these encounters with America. Pagden
explores the strategies used by Columbus and the early chroniclers
of America to describe a continent and its inhabitants so deeply
unfamiliar to Europeans that they seemed hardly to be real. He
looks at how, in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries,
Europeans reacted in different ways to these descriptions. Some,
like the Prussian explorer and naturalist Alexander von Humboldt,
declared that scientific understanding before the oceanic voyages
had advanced by slow steps and that the encounter with America had
invigorated Europeans to make new discoveries in many directions at
once. Other Europeans, particularly Enlightenment and Romantic
figures, argued fiercely against the whole process of colonization
and acculturation in the Americas. French philosophe Denis Diderot,
for example, felt that the European experience of America had led
to an increased familiarity with all that was potentially strange
and unusual-the creation of a global village-and that this had
resulted in a steady decline in that sense of wonder that was the
principal incentive for all scientific inquiry. The German
philosopher Johann Gottfried Herder proposed that all cultures must
recognize their essential alienness and that the single world
culture that colonization and commerce had helped to create must be
allowed to revert to its natural condition of plurality. In an
exploration of these and other responses, Pagden throws a vivid new
light on the intellectual consequences of Europe's encounter with
the Americas.
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