Literaturnachweis - Detailanzeige
Sonst. Personen | Feuchter, Jörg (Hrsg.); Hoffmann, Friedhelm (Hrsg.); Yun, Bee (Hrsg.) |
---|---|
Titel | Cultural transfers in dispute. Representations in Asia, Europe and the Arab World since the Middle Ages. Gefälligkeitsübersetzung: Kulturtransfer kontrovers. Beispiele aus Asien, Europa und der arabischen Welt seit dem Mittelalter. |
Quelle | Frankfurt, Main: Campus Verl. (2011), 335 S.
PDF als Volltext |
Reihe | Eigene und fremde Welten. Repräsentationen sozialer Ordnung im Vergleich. 23 |
Zusatzinformation | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Sprache | englisch |
Dokumenttyp | online; gedruckt; Monographie |
ISBN | 978-3-593-39404-6 |
Schlagwörter | Bildung; Kultur; Gewalt; Liebe; Ägypten; Afrika; Asien; Bildung; China; Demokratie; Faschismus; Gewalt; Indien; Islam; Liebe; Nordafrika; Recht; Südasien; Zivilisation; Arabische Staaten; Naher Osten; Kolonialismus; Ostasien; Westliche Welt; Judentum; Kultur; Mittelalter; Recht; Kolonialismus; Mittelalter; Demokratie; Entwicklungsland; Faschismus; Kultureller Wandel; Menschenrechte; Zivilisation; Islam; Judentum; Instrumentalisierung; Instrumentalisierung; Afrika; Arabische Staaten; Asien; China; Indien; Naher Osten; Nordafrika; Ostasien; Südasien; Westliche Welt; Ägypten |
Abstract | "Our conception of cultures and cultural change has altered dramatically in recent decades: no longer do we understand cultures as isolated units; rather, we see them as hybrid formations constantly engaged in a multidirectional process of exchange and influence with other cultures. Yet the very process by which we represent these cultural transfers is itself subject to cultural, political, and ideological conditions that affect our understanding, acknowledgment, and representation of them. Built around concrete examples of controversial representations of cultural transfer from Asia, the Arab world, and Europe, Cultural Transfers in Dispute presents a critical self-reflection an the scholarly practices that underpin our attempts to study and describe other cultures." (author's abstract). Contents: Hartmut Kaelble: Foreword: Representations and Transfers (9-14); Jörg Feuchter: Cultural Transfers in Dispute: An Introduction (15-40); Wolfram Drews: Jewish or Islamic Influence? The Iconoclastic Controversy in Dispute (41-60); Tim Geelhaar: Did the Medieval West Receive a "Complete Model" of Education from Classical Islam? Reconsidering George Makdisi and His Thesis (61-84); Dorothea Weltecke: Emperor Frederick II, "Sultan of Lucera", "Friend of the Muslims", Promoter of Cultural Transfer: Controversies and Suggestions (85-106); Kristin Skottki: Medieval Western Perceptions of Islam and the Scholars: What Went Wrong? (107-134); Bee Yun: Does the History of Medieval Political Thought Need a Spatial Turn? The Murals of Longthorpe, the Secretum secretorum and the Intercultural Transfer of Political Ideas in the High Middle Ages (135-148); Joseph-Simon Görlach: Western Representations of Fascist Influences on Islamist Thought (149-166); Benjamin Zachariah: Transfers, Formations, Transformations? Some Programmatic Notes on Fascism in India, c. 1922-1938 (167-192); Andreas Weiß: Colonialism and Violence: Alleged Transfers and Political Instrumentalisation (193-210); Friedhelm Hoffmann: Legal Authenticity, Cultural Insulation and Undemocratic Rule: 'Abd-al-Razzaq Ahmad al-Sanhuri's (1895-1971) Sharia Project and Its Misrepresentation in Egypt (211-262); Heiner Roetz: Transfer in Dispute: The Case of China (263-282); Young-Sun Ha: The Global Diffusion of the Western Concept of Civilisation to Nineteenth-Century Korea (283-298); Jungwoon Choi: Importation of Love from Modern Europe to Korea (299-312). |
Erfasst von | GESIS - Leibniz-Institut für Sozialwissenschaften, Mannheim |
Update | 2012/4 |