The Way the Modern World Works : World Hegemony to World Impasse
Editorial Reviews
Book Description
Is it Americas historic destiny to be the ‘last of the hegemons? Hegemonic states are very special countries that have simultaneously dominated the world both economically and politically and it seems increasingly likely that no country can follow the USA in this role. In this intellectual and creative tour de force, Peter Taylor, famous as the creator of world-systems political geography, examines hegemony as a concept in social practices and by using the experience of the three classic hegemonies, 17th-century Holland, 19th-century Britain and 20th-century America to provide a breathtaking new perspective on world history, political ideas and the nature of modernity. Professor Taylor weaves a rich tapestry of historical insight with arresting detail and innovative synthesis to show how for each hegemon political and economic dominance led to cultural power which shaped the entire world system. But in a fin de siecle world with little prospect of a new hegemonic order, are we perhaps facing the end of the world as we know it? In this constantly challenging, intriguing and original book the reader will find a compelling, disturbing yet exhilarating distillation of history, politics, economics, culture and ideology of the last four centuries. It will be the key book for students of politics, geography and history and for the general reader who wants to understand where todays world has come from and where it is going.
The publisher, John Wiley & Sons
The Netherlands, Great Britain and the USA have had an exorbitant influence on the creation of our modern world. This book tells the story of these 'hegemonic powers' over four centuries. The Dutch made making money respectable in the seventeenth century, the British invented a new industrial world in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries and the Americans taught the world to be mass consumers in our century. Hence, in each era, other countries copied the hegemonic state in order to keep up in a rapidly changing world. In this way the world was recreated in the image of the hegemon, first as mercantilism, then industrialisation and finally 'Americanisation' in our times. Thought-provoking, challenging, articulate and humane this is a key title for anyone who wants to understand the way the world works in the twentieth century.
The Way the Modern World Works : World Hegemony to World Impasse
The Way the Modern World Works: World Hegemony to World Impasse,Peter J. Taylor,John Wiley & Sons,0471965863,Civilization, Modern,Culture,History,History - General History,History, Modern,History: World,Political Sociology,Political science,Politics/International Relations,World - General,World politics,American history,British & Irish history,Economic history,European history (ie other than Britain & Ireland),History / World,International relations,Netherlands,USA,United Kingdom, Great Britain
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