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World Historians and Their Goals: Twentieth-Century Answers to Modernism

Autor Paul Costello
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 31 dec 1994
Costello analyzes paradigms of world history, focusing on seven twentieth-century historians, from H. G. Wells to William H. McNeill. He interprets central models of the history of civilizations as responses to modernism and as efforts to rescue meaningful patterns of history as a whole.

Costello locates his study in the post-Nietzschean context, in which the "death of God" and modernism's threat to progressive ideology stimulated a perception of the crisis of Western civilization. He analyzes H. G. Wells's sense of "progress threatened," in which the catastrophic potentials of modernity demand a world state; the cyclical "decline of civilizations" theories of Oswald Spengler, Arnold J. Toynbee, Pitirim Sorokin, Christopher Dawson, and Lewis Mumford; and the ecological metahistory of William H. McNeill.

These historians, Costello finds, develop a pattern of the past that incorporates a history of the future—a pattern that perpetuates those they perceive in their study of the rise and fall of civilizations. Costello describes a reciprocal process between the historians' analyses of the past and their personal visions of the future. Such visions, he suggests, present the historian with moral imperatives that demand action in line with the hidden ends of history.

Each chapter includes a biographical sketch, a study of the intellectual influences on its subject's thought, an evaluation of his goals, and a brief review of relevant criticism. The various theories are examined in light of each historian's moral and philosophic intentions and polemical goals in writing.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780875805641
ISBN-10: 0875805647
Pagini: 325
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.5 kg
Editura: Northern Illinois University Press
Colecția Northern Illinois University Press

Cuprins

Table of Contents One: World History in the West: An Interrupted Dialogue with Providence
Two: Evolutionary Ethics and the Rise of the World State: The Universal History of H. G. Wells
Three: The Problem of Oswald Spengler
Four: The Religious Premise and Goals of Arnold Toynbee's World History
Five: The Imperatives of Supersystem Transitions: Pitirim Sorokin's Metahistory
Six: Christopher Dawson: The Tension between History and Its End
Seven: Lewis Mumford: The Generalist as Metahistorian
Eight: William H. McNeill's Ecological Mythistory: Toward an Ambiguous Future
Nine: World History and Eschatology: The Goals of the Metahistorians
Notes
Bibliography
Index

Notă biografică

Paul Costello

Descriere

Costello analyzes paradigms of world history, focusing on seven twentieth-century historians, from H. G. Wells to William H. McNeill. He interprets central models of the history of civilizations as responses to modernism and as efforts to rescue meaningful patterns of history as a whole.

Costello locates his study in the post-Nietzschean context, in which the "death of God" and modernism's threat to progressive ideology stimulated a perception of the crisis of Western civilization. He analyzes H. G. Wells's sense of "progress threatened," in which the catastrophic potentials of modernity demand a world state; the cyclical "decline of civilizations" theories of Oswald Spengler, Arnold J. Toynbee, Pitirim Sorokin, Christopher Dawson, and Lewis Mumford; and the ecological metahistory of William H. McNeill.

These historians, Costello finds, develop a pattern of the past that incorporates a history of the future—a pattern that perpetuates those they perceive in their study of the rise and fall of civilizations. Costello describes a reciprocal process between the historians' analyses of the past and their personal visions of the future. Such visions, he suggests, present the historian with moral imperatives that demand action in line with the hidden ends of history.

Each chapter includes a biographical sketch, a study of the intellectual influences on its subject's thought, an evaluation of his goals, and a brief review of relevant criticism. The various theories are examined in light of each historian's moral and philosophic intentions and polemical goals in writing.