Globalizations of Cultural Criticism and the Transformative Roles of Critics
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Antony Adolf
There is no shortage of criticism of globalization, but what of globalizations of criticism? Six transformative roles of cultural critics crucial to the 21st century are themselves critically examined here: exposure, dissent, analysis, interpretation, pragmatism and counter-production. Contemporary and historical examples ranging from Islamic criticism of the West to Chinese criticism of violence, from the Frankfurt School to that of Gandhi, become focal points around which a new globalized criticism of cultural, political and socioeconomic value is put forth, with worldwide campaigns underway for a culture of peace as a springboard. In these as contexts, as within our own, the empowering transformative roles of the critic emerge not from within single traditions organically, but from multiple ones by collaborative design. Questioning not only the assumptions of critical practices, but also their current technological and philosophical underpinnings, points to renewed critical practices for our times.
©2011 Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co. KG, Berlin/Boston
Articles in the same Issue
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- Uneven Judicialization: Comparing International Dispute Settlement in Security, Trade, and the Environment
- Editors' Forum: The Practices of Transnational Studies
- Introduction
- Transnationalism and the Scalar Politics of Imperialism
- Jurisdiction Leap, Political Drain, and Other Dangers of Transnational History
- Three Logics of Race: Theory and Exception in the Transnational History of Empire
- Transnational Feminist Studies: A Brief Sketch
- Not Just Made in the U.S.A: Seeing National Culture Transnationally
- Exile Economics: The Transnational Contributions and Limits of the League of Nations' Economic and Financial Section
- Between American Studies and Comparative Literature
- Cities and Strategic Elsewheres: Developments in the Transnational Politics of Remaking Urban Space
- Documentation
- Globalizations of Cultural Criticism and the Transformative Roles of Critics
- Commentary
- Legalism as a Global Strategy: Foundations of Barack Obama's Leadership
- Review Essay
- The Giant and the Temple: A Review of Dietmar Rothermund's India: The Rise of an Asian Giant and Maria Misra's Vishnu's Crowded Temple: India since the Great Rebellion
Articles in the same Issue
- Article
- The Impact of Economic Globalization on Labor Informality
- Uneven Judicialization: Comparing International Dispute Settlement in Security, Trade, and the Environment
- Editors' Forum: The Practices of Transnational Studies
- Introduction
- Transnationalism and the Scalar Politics of Imperialism
- Jurisdiction Leap, Political Drain, and Other Dangers of Transnational History
- Three Logics of Race: Theory and Exception in the Transnational History of Empire
- Transnational Feminist Studies: A Brief Sketch
- Not Just Made in the U.S.A: Seeing National Culture Transnationally
- Exile Economics: The Transnational Contributions and Limits of the League of Nations' Economic and Financial Section
- Between American Studies and Comparative Literature
- Cities and Strategic Elsewheres: Developments in the Transnational Politics of Remaking Urban Space
- Documentation
- Globalizations of Cultural Criticism and the Transformative Roles of Critics
- Commentary
- Legalism as a Global Strategy: Foundations of Barack Obama's Leadership
- Review Essay
- The Giant and the Temple: A Review of Dietmar Rothermund's India: The Rise of an Asian Giant and Maria Misra's Vishnu's Crowded Temple: India since the Great Rebellion