After ideocracy and civil society Gellner, Polanyi and the new peripheralization of Central Europe

Resource type
Author/contributor
Title
After ideocracy and civil society Gellner, Polanyi and the new peripheralization of Central Europe
Abstract
Behind only that of Bronislaw Malinowski, the influence of the Central European polymaths Ernest Gellner and Karl Polanyi on socio-cultural anthropology in the 20th century was profound. Gellner and Polanyi also influenced much wider swathes of scholarship. They belong to different generations and were raised in quite different settings in Prague and Budapest respectively. What these thinkers have in common is a philosophy of history which posits the industrial revolution in northwest Europe as a radical rupture in Weltgeschichte. Polanyi’s ‘great transformation’, with its focus on the economy, corresponds to Gellner’s metaphor of the ‘big ditch’ and focus on a new polity. The cultural homogenization of the nation-state and the disembedding of the economy from society in the era of free trade are two sides of the same coin. This paper argues that these complementary models derive to a considerable degree from the scholars’ background on the margins of industrializing Europe, in the ruins of the Habsburg Empire.
Publication
Thesis Eleven
Pages
0725513615584213
Date
2015-04-24
Journal Abbr
Thesis Eleven
Language
English
ISSN
0725-5136, 1461-7455
Accessed
2016-07-12, 5:03 p.m.
Library Catalog
Citation
Hann, Chris. 2015. “After Ideocracy and Civil Society Gellner, Polanyi and the New Peripheralization of Central Europe.” Thesis Eleven 0725513615584213. DOI: 10.1177/0725513615584213.
Discipline
Publication year
Keywords
  • anthropology
  • Central Europe
  • civil society
  • GELLNER, Ernest

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