Progress:its visionaries and its malcontents
In: Majumdar , M & Chafer , T 2017 , ' Progress : its visionaries and its malcontents ' Interventions: International Journal of Postcolonial Studies , vol 19 , no. 5 , pp. 599-608 . DOI:10.1080/1369801X.2017.1336459
Abstract
The introduction to this special issue on Progress: its visionaries and its malcontents sketches the background to contemporary debates about the concept of progress. It focuses particularly on the notion of political progress, or, in other words, a belief in the possibility of deliberate, concerted, collective action to change the world for the better. It traces how the notion of progress received a significant boost at the time of the European Enlightenment and then goes on to discuss some of the key fault-lines in this thinking, most notably as it relates to imperialism and colonialism. In the face of a number of other recent critiques of progress, the importance of certain key historical periods, when progress was viewed in a more positive light and deemed to be a real, achievable goal, provides the rationale for the selection of texts chosen for this issue.
Problem melden