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Call for Papers

Theme: 'The West' and its Discontents
Subtitle: Contemporary Challenges to Western Dominance
Type: 46th Annual Conference
Institution: International Society for the Comparative Study of
Civilizations
   Monmouth University
Location: West Long Branch, NJ (USA)
Date: 29.6.–2.7.2016
Deadline: 15.4.2016

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Since 1500, the West has moved from the edge of Eurasia, from
insignificance to dominate the world politically, culturally, and
economically. Since the end of World War II, its values have
established the de facto “global system” of trade, economics, and
preferred governance. The last challenges to these particularly
Anglo-Saxon values survived bitterly-fought wars against Fascist Nazi
Germany and Fascist Japan in World War II and prolonged surrogate
wars against the Soviet Union ending in the collapse of their empire
in 1991. The Western Global System seemed to be without challenge.

But now challenges come from all sides.

- Islam
A religion whose dominance had begun a decline in 1250, is having a
renewal of militant zeal. To what degree is the West at war with
Islam, contrary to the repeated assurances of our leaders? How can
this be thought of as a “clash of civilizations”? Can the revival of
the model of the ancient Caliphate: a single religious dictatorship,
replace the western Global System?

- Environmental Crisis
Pope Francis has issued an Encyclical urging his believers and the
world to heed the danger of global warming. He warns that rampant
industrialization has created luxury for the rich nations but undue
suffering in the way of pollution and misery for the poor. To what
degree has capitalism, with its ethos of materialism, contributed to
the environmental crisis? Can technologies address the adverse
effects of environmental damage? Can a global system of mandatory
environmentalism replace capitalism without increasing global poverty?

- The Crisis of Capitalism
Is capitalism really working? For whom? The gulf between rich and
poor seems to be growing ever wider. Is the “American Dream” even
relevant anymore? How are the cost-saving mechanisms of outsourcing
and technological innovation contributing to the unemployment crisis
in the US? Yet many of the world’s poor have been lifted out of
poverty by science, technology and democracy in this past century.
Capitalism has worked in ways that no other ideologies have managed
to do. Or was much of that prosperity built on “borrowed” money and
deferred payments? Perhaps the Great Recession”: of 2008 has made it
painfully clear that it is now time to pay the overdue bill.

- China and Russia: Challenges to the Western System
China is a newly awakened ancient culture that has its own amalgam of
the old and the new. To some degree China rejects the hegemony of the
Western Global System, though it also appears to have lately
appropriated elements of it to its own benefit. Russia also indicates
unwillingness to accept Western hegemony. What institutions do they
offer that provide better societal solutions?

- Multiculturalism
Many European countries have attempted the model of multiculturalism,
admitting large numbers of immigrants and abolishing internal borders
in an attempt to create a united Europe. Has this model succeeded?
Can it really succeed when immigrants are not willing or able to
integrate into their host country’s culture?  Is this model now under
fire? Also interesting to consider are the challenges to Western
culture in the realm of art and music.  As globalization progresses
in the cultural realm we are seeing unprecedented cultural exchange
in these areas. While non-Western music and art do not represent
challenges per se to the West, they are an important part of the
encounter of the West with the other. Of particular interest will be
modes of cultural appropriation and synthesis. 

- The Energy Revolution
As the United States become energy independent and an energy
exporter, how does that affect the Global System?   Do we still need
the Middle  East?  Israel has become a water exporter in the Middle
East, the only country with technologies dealing with water. How does
this affect the relationships in that region and the Global System?

- Decadence and Moral Decay: The Challenge from Within
Why are so many people in the US 100 times more interested in the
latest cell-phone app, online video game or “reality TV” distraction,
than they are about the urgent issues facing civilization today? Was
Spengler right about the "Decline of the West", not only in terms of
the political or economic spheres, but in a spiritual sense as well?
What are the implications of this for civilizational study?

The world is changing at a rapid pace. How are we to understand these
challenges to Western hegemony?  What are the positives and what are
the negatives?

Papers are invited on the above topics, and any other topics of
civilizational relevance. 

Please send abstracts by April 15 to Program Chair, Dr. Laina
Farhat-Holzman: [email protected]




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