Toward an other globalization : from the single thought to universal conscience

Author(s)

Bibliographic Information

Toward an other globalization : from the single thought to universal conscience

Milton Santos ; translated and edited by Lucas Melgaço and Tim Clarke

(Pioneers in arts, humanities, science, engineering, practice / series editor, Hans Günter Brauch, v. 12)

Springer, c2017

Other Title

Por uma outra globalização : do pensamento único à consciência universal

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Note

Translation of: Por uma outra globalização : do pensamento único à consciência universal. Rio de Janeiro : Record, 2000

Includes bibliographical references (p. 101-107)

Description and Table of Contents

Description

This book presents an alternative theory of globalization that derives not from the dominant perspective of the West, from which this process emerged, but from the critical vantage point of the Third World, which has borne the heaviest burdens of globalization. It offers a critical and uniquely first-hand perspective that is lacking not only from the apologists of Western hegemony, but from most scholars writing against this hegemony from within the globalizing world. Renowned throughout Latin America and parts of Europe, the author, Brazilian geographer Milton Santos, has long been for the most part inaccessible to the English-speaking world. Only one of his books, The Shared Space: The Two Circuits of the Urban Economy in Underdeveloped Countries, published in 1975, has been translated into English; nevertheless, the works of Santos's most important phase, from the 1980s until his death in 2001, have remained unavailable to English readers. With the translation of Toward an Other Globalization, one of the last works published in Santos's lifetime, this situation has finally been rectified. In this book, Santos argues that we must consider globalization in three different senses: globalization as a fable (the world as globalizing agents make us believe), as perversity (the world as it is presently, in the throes of globalization), and as possibility (the world as it could be). What emerges from the analysis of these three senses is an alternative theory of globalization rooted in the perspective of the so-called Global South. Santos concludes his text with a message that is optimistic, but in no way nai ve. What he offers instead is a revolutionary optimism and, indeed, an other globalization.

Table of Contents

The Return of the Territory.- General Introduction.- The Production of Globalization.- A Perverse Globalization.- The Territory of Money and Fragmentation.- Limits to Perverse Globalization.-Transition on the March.- Bibliography.

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Details

  • NCID
    BB27479893
  • ISBN
    • 9783319538914
  • Country Code
    sz
  • Title Language Code
    eng
  • Text Language Code
    eng
  • Original Language Code
    por
  • Place of Publication
    Cham
  • Pages/Volumes
    xx, 111 p.
  • Size
    25 cm
  • Classification
  • Subject Headings
  • Parent Bibliography ID
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