Ian Manners
Professor
Europaian Studies
Författare
Summary, in English
I compare and contrast four cross-disciplinary approaches to the social and natural sciences within the specific context of the tradition of speculation about Europe. As we will see later, I have termed the three conventional social science approaches ‘civilisational’, ‘categorical’, and ‘cultural’ Europe. My innovation is to suggest a fourth approach drawn from the natural sciences — that of ‘co-constituted’ Europe. As Lynn Margulis suggested in the extract at the start of this article, as a species we cling to the familiar, comforting conformities of the mainstream — a mainstream that often determines what we see and how we know. By challenging ‘convention’ head-on in this article, I intend to argue that it is possible to engage in European theory through an understanding and appreciation of broader developments in the social and natural sciences — an engagement I will term ‘Europaian studies’. What I intend to do is speculate about Europe from four radically different crossdisciplinary approaches, a speculation that will lead me to conclude by reflecting on what Europaian studies means for the understanding of contemporary Europe.
Publiceringsår
2003
Språk
Engelska
Sidor
67-83
Publikation/Tidskrift/Serie
Journal of Contemporary European Studies
Volym
11
Issue
1
Dokumenttyp
Artikel i tidskrift
Förlag
Routledge
Ämne
- Political Science
Nyckelord
- European Studies
- European Union
- Gaia
- co-constituted Europe
- holism
- homoeostasis
- symbiosis
- atomism
Aktiv
Published
ISBN/ISSN/Övrigt
- ISSN: 1478-2804