Tytuł pozycji:
Blue Water. A Thesis
- Tytuł:
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Blue Water. A Thesis
- Autorzy:
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Robbins, Bruce
- Powiązania:
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https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/625963.pdf
- Data publikacji:
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2015
- Wydawca:
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Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Śląskiego
- Źródło:
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Review of International American Studies; 2015, 8, 1
1991-2773
- Język:
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angielski
- Prawa:
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CC BY-SA: Creative Commons Uznanie autorstwa - Na tych samych warunkach 4.0
- Dostawca treści:
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Biblioteka Nauki
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Przejdź do źródła  Link otwiera się w nowym oknie
The historical framework that Bruce Robbins draws up for rethinking ‘the newness of the New World as opposed to the oldness of the Old World’ is a cosmopolitan rather than a transatlantic one, though Robbins is concerned not only with cosmopolitanism in space, but in time, too. Moving from a consideration of the political work done by the notoriously bizarre ‘Blue Water Thesis’, according to which only sea-based conquest would count as colonialism, Robbins asks what happens if we do not limit our critical work to studying modern colonialism, but include non-European, pre-modern colonialism into the picture. This is what he means by cosmopolitanism in time-a ‘radical expansion in the time frame’ that inevitably ‘ends up undermining our moralized geographies’. Such unsettling of time-honored historical and moral categories is of course open to the charge of allowing America to forgive itself for its empire building, which considered on a much larger time scale, may appear just as bloody and immoral as older, non-American and non-European imperialisms. On the other hand, this might be a risk worth taking. Rethinking America in a much longer unit of time is a way to escape from the grips of American exceptionalism, and a way to remind ourselves that America may not be ‘meant to be the glory and instructor of the world’.