Under Eastern Eyes

Under Eastern Eyes

Pankaj Mishra’s look at intellectual history gives Asia’s tradition of anti-imperialist thought a pre-history.

Vijay Prashad is a historian, author and the director of Tricontinental: Institute for Social Research, an inter-movement research organisation based in Buenos Aires, Johannesburg, New Delhi and São Paulo. He is also the Chief Editor of LeftWord Books and a fellow at the Independent Media Institute. As a journalist, he writes for Frontline, the Hindu, and Turkey’s BirGün. He has been associated with Himal Southasian since its inception.

Published on

An IMF report from 2011 suggested that by 2016, the United States would no longer be the largest economy in the world. This is, as the historian Ferdinand Braudel put it, the "sign of autumn" for Atlantic hegemony. Signals of decline are visible from Athens to Detroit, with fervent hopes placed on the Captains of Finance to stem the collapse by some mathematical wizardry. The spokesperson of this Atlantic financial class is the Harvard historian Niall Ferguson, whose book Civilisation: The West and the Rest (2011) bemoans "our own loss of faith in the civilisation we inherited from our ancestors." This ethnocentric worry was shared by his late Harvard colleague Samuel Huntington, whose books celebrated the cultural superiority of "Anglo-Protestant society" and bemoaned its loss with the rise of the East (The Clash of Civilisations and the Remaking of World Order, 1996) and the entry of Latin Americans into the United States (Who Are We?, 2004). The demise of the West was put down to a crisis within the cultural world of Anglo-Protestantism. 'How have we failed?' seemed to be the refrain, and this failure was studied in cultural terms.

The writer Pankaj Mishra offered a stern rebuke to Ferguson in the London Review of Books (November 2011). Mishra compared Ferguson to the racist writer Lothrop Stoddard, whose The Rising Tide of Color (1920) worried that "the white man, like King Canute, seats himself upon the tidal sands and bids the waves be stayed. He will be lucky if he escapes merely with wet shoes." Stoddard worried about the faltering confidence of white supremacy, which today seems vulgar. Ferguson's register is not so obviously biological, but masks its racism through culture. He longs for the "'thrifty asceticism' of Protestants of yore", and he shudders that "empire has become a dirty word." The defence of imperialism and of cultural primacy defines Ferguson's world, which is why Mishra accused Ferguson of "nostalgia for the intellectual certainties of the summer of 1914." This critique so irritated Ferguson that he took legal action against the LRB.

Loading content, please wait...
Himal Southasian
www.himalmag.com