|
|
Showing 1 - 6 of
6 matches in All Departments
At the beginning of the new millennium, the social sciences
discover an epochal turn making it necessary to revolutionise their
theory-building: As a response to what they call the globalisation
of the social, they find the need to globalise their theorising as
well. It is odd to discover after two centuries of colonialism and
imperialism, after two world wars and several economic world crises
that there is a world beyond the national socials; it is even more
strange that the social sciences globalise their theorising by
comparing theories about nationally confined socials and by
creating all sorts of, preferably, local theories, just as if any
national social was a secluded social biotope. Discussing how to
globalise the social sciences, they argue that globalising social
science theorising means finding a way of theorising that must,
above all, be liberated from scientism in order to allow a
provincialisation of thinking. Not surprisingly, the globalising
social sciences also rediscover mythological and moral thinking as
a means for a true scientific universalism. Michael Kuhns book
presents many thought-provoking arguments on the oddities of the
globalising social sciences and on how these oddities are not
accidents, but a consequence of the nature of how the social
sciences theorise about the social.
That we live in a world ruled and confused by cultural diversities
has become common sense. It was the social sciences that gave birth
to a new theoretical paradigm, the creation of cultural theories.
Since then, social science theorising applies to any social
phenomenon across the world exploring cultural diversities in any
social practice -- except in regard to the social sciences and how
they practice the creation of knowledge. How academics in the
social sciences across the world create knowledge is no topic for
cultural theories. Social science theorising seemingly assumes that
creating knowledge does not know such diversities. Kazumi Okamoto
presents the development of an analytical instrument that helps
study academic culture, analyse academic practices of how social
sciences create and distribute knowledge, and the influence the
academic environment has on their knowledge productions. Applying
this theoretical tool to the academe in Japan, she further presents
a case study about how social scientists in Japan interpret
academic practices and how they are affected by their academic
environment. Studying the academic culture in the case of Japan,
she reveals that not only the academic practices and the academic
environment of the academe in Japan show much less diversities than
cultural theories tend to presuppose, but that the assumption that
creating social science knowledge does not know cultural
diversities is an error as well.
The European social sciences tend to absorb criticism that has been
passed on the European approach and re-label it as a part of what
the critique opposes; criticism of European social sciences by
subaltern social sciences, their talking back, has become a
frequent line of reflection in European social sciences. The
re-labelling of the critique of the European approach to social
sciences towards a critique from Southern social sciences of
Western social sciences has somehow turned Southern as well as
Western social sciences into competing contributors to the same
globalising social sciences. Both are no longer arguing about the
European approach to social sciences but about which social thought
from which part of the globe prevails. If the critique becomes a
part of what it opposes, one might conclude that the European
social sciences are very adaptable and capable of learning. One
might, however, also raise the question whether there is anything
wrong with the criticism of the European social sciences; or, for
that matter, whether there is anything wrong with the European
social sciences themselves. The contributions in this book discuss
these questions from different angles: They revisit the mainstream
critique of the European social sciences, and they suggest new
arguments criticising social science theories that may be found as
often in the Western as in the Southern discourse.
This innovative book provides new perspectives on the globalization
of knowledge and the notion of hegemonic sciences. Tying together
contributions of authors from all across the world, it challenges
existing theories of hegemonic sciences and sheds new light on how
they have been and are being constructed. Examining more closely
the notions of 'human rights' and 'individualization', this
much-needed volume offers new and alternative ideas on how to
transform the universalization of the Western model of science and
can serve as an eye-opener for all those interested in
non-hegemonic scientific discourse. This book is published within
the Series 'Beyond the Social Sciences'.
In the past, the European social sciences labelled and discredited
knowledge that did not follow the definition for scientific
knowledge as applied by the European social sciences as an
alternative concept of knowledge, as indigenous knowledge.
Perception has changed with time: Not only has indigenous knowledge
become an entrance ticket to the European social science world, but
the indigenisation of European theories is seen by some as the
contribution of peripheral social sciences to join the theories of
the centres. This book offers contributions to the discourses about
alternative concepts of knowledge, inviting the reader to decide if
they are alternative, indigenous, or European types of knowledge.
However, in order to make this decision, the reader must know what
the nature of the European concepts of science and of scientific
knowledge is; this might be a motivation to read a book that
presents thoughts claiming to be alternative concepts of knowledge,
alternative to the European concept of science.
|
|