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Call for Publications

Theme: Civilizations and Globalizations
Publication: Glocalism. Journal of Culture, Politics and Innovation
Date: Issue 2019,1 (March 2019)
Deadline: 31.1.2019

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The possibility that a civilization might not succumb to the advance
of history depends on its capacity to react to the challenges that
emanate from it. If, on one hand, ascent and decline are (in general)
considered characteristics typical of all civilizations, on the other
hand it is possible to also see them as a different and less evident
phenomenon: one which is made up of the transformation of
civilizations into other civilizations and in their expressions of
social innovation phenomena.

Clearly, it does not make sense to reason in terms of universal
determinism, that is, with the idea of a necessary cycle that always
works similarly both in different historical moments as well as in
geographic and social contexts. Nor is it correct to reduce the
multiplicity of civilizing processes to a unique model of
“civilization”. The historical dynamics of civilization work
differently and do not act only from the outside upon individuals and
social groups. On the contrary, within these processes, individuals
generate or internalize certain values, which make them bearers –
through their existence – in the increasingly broader environment in
which they live.

Today, more than in the past, both individuals and their surrounding
contexts are globally connected. The interaction between different
processes of civilization continuously manifests itself, generating a
possible twofold development: a progressive clash between
civilizations originating from the conflict between the different
identities that contend for hegemony over a world perceived as global
but also delineated by defined and irreducible spaces and identities;
or an idea of civilization that is decentralized and de-spatialized
originating from a dynamic of continuous hybridization, shaped by the
intangible flows that crisscross the globe.

The multiplicity of ongoing processes and their temporal durations
may push towards a more plural redefinition of globalization
understood as the set of ways in which different cultures acknowledge
(or have conceived) the interdependence and contact between
civilizations. Thinking about what were, or are, the relationships
between different civilizations and different “globalizations” as
well as how they change the processes of civilization in relation to
plural global dynamics, can undoubtedly offer new paradigms in which
to understand social complexity with hermeneutical modalities that
are just as complex.

Submissions

“Glocalism” is a peer-reviewed, open-access and cross-disciplinary
journal. We welcome studies in any field, with or without comparative
approach, that address both practical effects and theoretical import.

Articles can be in any language and length chosen by the author,
while its abstract and keywords have to be in English.

Deadline: January 31, 2019.
This issue is scheduled to appear at end-March 2019.

All articles should be sent to:
p.basse...@globusetlocus.org and davide.cade...@unimi.it

Journal website:
http://www.glocalismjournal.net




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