Limits Of 19Th Century Paradigms
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Immanuel Wallerstein is the director of the Fernand Braudel Center for the Study of Economies, Historical Systems and Civilizations at the State University of New York at Binghamton, where he is also an emeritus Distinguished Professor of Sociology. He is currently a research sociologist at Yale University.
Preface to the Second Edition Acknowledgments Introduction: Why Unthink? Part I: The Social Sciences: From Genesis to Bifurcation 1. The French Revolution as a World-Historical Event 2. Crises: The World-Economy, the Movements, and the Ideologies Part II: The Concept of Development 3. The Industrial Revolution: Cui Bono? 4. Economic Theories and Historical Disparities of Development 5. Societal Development, or Development of the World-System? 6. The Myrdal Legacy: Racism and Underdevelopment as Dilemmas 7. Development: Lodestar or Illusion? Part III: Concepts of Time and Space 8. A Comment on Epistemology: What is Africa? 9. Does India Exist? 10. The Inventions of TimeSpace Realities: Towards an Understanding of our Historical Systems Part IV: Revisiting Marx 11. Marx and Underdevelopment 12. Marxisms as Utopias: Evolving Ideologies Part V: Revisiting Braudel 13. Fernand Braudel, Historian, "homme de la conjoncture" 14. Capitalism: The Enemy of the Market? 15. Braudel on Capitalism, or Everything Upside Down 16. Beyond Annales? Part VI: World-Systems Analysis as Unthinking 17. Historical Systems as Complex Systems 18. Call for a Debate about the Paradigm 19. A Theory of Economic History in Place of Economic Theory? 20. World-Systems Analysis: The Second Phase References Index