The Global Age: State and Society Beyond Modernity

Front Cover
John Wiley & Sons, 2013 M06 28 - 256 pages
Many authors who discuss the idea of globalization see it as continuing pre-established paths of development of modern societies. Post-modernist writers, by contrast, have lost sight of the importance of historical narrative altogether. Martin Albrow argues that neither group is able to recognize the new era which stares us in the face. A history of the present needs an explicit epochal theory to understand the transition to the Global Age.

When globality displaces modernity there is a general decentering of state, government, economy, culture, and community. Albrow calls for a recasting of the theory of such institutions and the relations between them. He finds an open potential for society to recover its abiding significance in the face of the declining nation state. At the same time a new kind of citizenship is emerging.

This important book will provoke both radicals and conservatives. Its scholarship ranges widely across the social sciences and humanities. It is bound to promote wide cross-disciplinary debate.

From inside the book

Contents

Acknowledgements
The Construction of NationState Society
The Decay of the Modern Project
Theorizing the Transition
Globalization
Historical Narrative for the New
Systems
People
The Future State and Society
The Global Age Hypothesis
Notes
References
Index
Copyright

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About the author (2013)

Martin Albrow, State University of New York Stony Brook

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