Colonialism and Modern Social Theory. Gurminder K. Bhambra

Colonialism and Modern Social Theory - Gurminder K. Bhambra


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the analysis of colonialism as integral to the construction of race relations in the United States and elsewhere was largely absent from sociology. When Giddens turned to a reinterpretation of Marx, Weber, and Durkheim, it was with the intention of reinvigorating ‘the analysis of trends of development within the “advanced” societies’ (Giddens 1971: 246) and of casting doubt on the ‘implicit assumption that the main characteristics of the “developed societies” are known’ (246). He wrote further that, ‘paradoxically, in taking up again the problems with which they were primarily concerned, we may hope ultimately to liberate ourselves from our present heavy dependence on the ideas which they formulated’ (247). As we will argue throughout the book, however, the ‘problems’ taken up in the past also cover topics that are neglected and misrepresented in the present more than they were in the past.6

      Calls to decolonise the university in the 1960s were part of wider movements of decolonisation, especially in East Africa (Mamdani 2019). They involved challenges both to the western curriculum and to the nature of academic recruitment and training. Such initiatives were typically seen as ‘anti-western’, and it is only recently that a self-critical movement to decolonise the university has emerged in the western academy itself (Bhambra, Nişancioǧlu, and Gebrial 2018). The impetus of this movement comes largely from Africa, via the examples of the Rhodes Must Fall and Fees Must Fall movements in South Africa. This book takes up one aspect of the wider discussion. It addresses the colonial context in which the contemporary European understanding of modern social theory has been formed. It takes seriously the histories that created the context for the development of these ideas and the ways in which these colonial histories were elided in subsequent discussions.

      We place firmly within their times the theorists with whom we engage, and we discuss their writings in the light of the histories they were living through. Our purpose is to ‘decolonise’ the concepts and categories they have bequeathed to us. This is a process of contextual understanding and reconstruction. We do not claim to provide an exhaustive account of their writings on other topics. We are instead drawing attention to omissions in the secondary literature, and thus to the processes of ‘purification’ that have removed colonialism and empire from sociological understandings of modernity. In consequence, our purpose is to contribute to what Connell (1997: 1539) calls the ‘genre of commentary and exposition’, which constitutes the canon by reconstructing it from within.

      Our book focuses on five key sociological figures of the nineteenth and early twentieth century: Tocqueville, Marx, Weber, Durkheim, and Du Bois. In the context of how European social theory is conventionally understood, our treatment of Marx, Weber, and Durkheim needs no further explanation. Tocqueville is not usually part of the sociological canon. Nevertheless, we argue that he is a major source for arguments about the significance of democracy to modernity, especially in the twin contexts of the 1776 US Declaration of Independence and 1789 French Revolution. More importantly, his less known discussion of slavery and of the treatment of indigenous people has serious implications for the development of that democracy and for how it is understood. For example, Tocqueville’s arguments about the role of the movement of populations from Europe to the United States and its consequences for freed African Americans resonate with Du Bois’s subsequent account of the colour line, in spite of their different sensibilities (see pp. 69–70 in this volume).

      Our concerns, then, are also about the less fashionable mode of rational reconstruction, a reconstruction focused upon current issues of identity and difference and their relationship to histories of colonialism and empire. In this way we initiate a new dialogue between past and present, a dialogue largely absent from standard sociological understandings of modernity that are themselves represented as owing their first formulation to the authors we discuss. These writers did engage with colonialism and its associated practices of dispossession and forced labour, yet their discussions along such themes have largely been edited out in the process of canon formation. The fact that they could be edited out says something about the way they were initially set up. It also points to limitations in approaches that are carried forward into the present conceptual and methodological ‘jurisdiction’ of sociology and reinforce its problems.

      We begin by placing the writings


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