"Batı Uygarlığı" sayfasının sürümleri arasındaki fark

DrOS'un not defteri sitesinden
Gezinti kısmına atla Arama kısmına atla
("(İng. ''western civilization'') ==Göndermeler== ===Diğer=== {{:Burke 000002}} ==Notlar== <references/>" içeriğiyle yeni sayfa oluşturdu)
 
k
 
3. satır: 3. satır:
 
===Diğer===
 
===Diğer===
 
{{:Burke 000002}}
 
{{:Burke 000002}}
 +
{{:Burke 000003}}
 
==Notlar==
 
==Notlar==
 
<references/>
 
<references/>

10.24, 3 Ekim 2021 itibarı ile sayfanın şu anki hâli

(İng. western civilization)

Göndermeler[düzenle]

Diğer[düzenle]

Both orientalism and Western civilization begin in the textualist position that civilizations have essences, and that these essences are best seen in the Great Books they have produced. (Who decides what's a Great Book, or what connection it might have to the lived lives of men and women in particular places and times is never satisfactorily explained.) The textualist position foreshortens history, annihilates change, and levels difference the better to represent an image of the past in dramatic form – either as tragedy, as in the case of Islamic civilization, or as triumph, as in the case of the rise of the West. In either case, it is a story whose rhythms are guided by the ineluctable working out of civilizational essences allegedly encoded in foundation texts. Thus we get the history of the West as the story of freedom and rationality, or the history of the East (pick an East, any East) as the story of despotism and cultural stasis.[1]
Wolf[2] argues that upon investigation, even the most remote village was affected by the emerging world economy and Western-dominated system of states.[3]

Notlar[düzenle]

  1. Burke III, Edmund (2002). "Introduction: Marshall G. S. Hodgson and world history". MARSHALL G. S. HODGSON Rethinking world history içinde. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. s. xv.
  2. Eric Wolf'a değiniyor; Eric Wolf, Europe and the People Without History (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1982).[DrOS]
  3. Burke III, Edmund (2002). "Introduction: Marshall G. S. Hodgson and world history". MARSHALL G. S. HODGSON Rethinking world history içinde. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. s. xix.