The Dictionary of Human Geography

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development becamemodernityon a planet-
ary scale, in which the West served as the
‘transcendental pivot of analytical reflection’
(Slater, 1992, p. 312). Western modernity
attempted to organize social life on the basis
of voluntary actions of individuals whose values
were supposed to be predominantlyutilitar-
ian.Similarly,natural resources came to
mean those parts ofnaturethat were required
as inputs for industrial production and colonial
trade. Technology and economics mutually
reinforced the assumption that nature’s limits
must be broken for the creation of abundance.
The concept of thenation-state, moreover,
displaced other surviving notions of thestate,
the latter being perceived as examples of
medievalism and primitivism (Anderson,
1991a [1983]). The process was strengthened
when ‘indigenous’ intellectuals and activists
confronting the colonial power found in the
idea of the nation-statetheclue to the West’s
economic success and political dominance:


Indeed, no other idea, except probably the
twin notions of modern science and devel-
opment, was accepted so uncritically by the
elites of old continuous civilizations like
China and India. Even modern science and
development became, for Third World elites
the responsibility precisely of the nation-
state and two new rationalizations for its
predominant role. (Nandy, 1992, p. 267)
Developmentdiscourseshave continued to
construct the relationship between West and
non-West in terms of the West being the
detached centre of rationality and intelligence:
the Westpossesses the expertise, technology and
management skills that the non-West is lacking.
Conversely, this lack is the chief cause of the
problems of the non-West (cf.occidentalism;
orientalism). What is consistently ignored in
this framework are questions ofpower and
inequality, whether on the global level of inter-
nationalmarkets, state subsidies and the arms
trade, or the more local level of landholding,
foodsupplies and income distribution. This
dominant paradigm of the West, furthermore,
‘constitutes a perfectly auto-referential sphere,
containing only a very limited number of elem-
ents. Need, scarcity, work, production, income,
and consumption are the key concepts within an
enclosed semantic field that has no need of the
outside world’ (Latouche, 1992, p. 254).
While the history of the ‘modernizing’ world
is often erroneously written as one of failed
imitation of the West – failures of seculardem-
ocracy,nationalism, enlightened modernity
or enslavement to ‘tradition’ – scholars


working in the post-colonial paradigms have
complicated such frameworks (see post-
colonialism). Conceptualizing modernity
as a construct and an organizingtrope, especially
for the national developmentalist successors of
colonial regimes, these scholars have suggested
ways in which the complexities of the East–West
encounters might be better apprehended
throughmetaphorsof translation, hybridization
and dislocation, rather than more monolithic
ideas of imitation, assimilationor rejection
(Abu-Lughod, 1998, p. 18). Furthermore, they
have complicated the very exercise of knowledge
production ‘in and for the West’ where the very
act of writing for the West about ‘the other’
implicates us in projects that establish Western
authority and cultural difference (Abu-Lughod,
2001, p. 105).
Such intellectual projects acquire particular
significance in the context offeministpolitics
in thethird world, which has had to negotiate
a complex relationship with Marxist struggles
at home, as well as with women’s movements
and writings in the West (Loomba, 1998,
p. 253: see alsomarxism). Despite the deep
scepticismtowhich‘feminism’ and agendas
associated with Western feminisms are often
subjected in post-colonial contexts, women’s
movements have consistently challenged the
assumption that women’s activism in post-
colonial worlds are only inspired by their
Western counterparts (see feminist geog-
raphies). Such moves have involved rewriting
indigenous histories, appropriating pre-
colonial symbols and mythologies, and ampli-
fying the voices of women themselves, each of
which is ridden with its own problems and
contradictions (Loomba, 1998). Grappling
with ‘the woman question’ anywhere requires:
(a) attending to the complex ways in which the
West and things/concepts associated with the
West are embraced, repudiated and translated
in contemporary politics; and (b) developing
subtle ways of thinking about thecultural
politicsof past and present colonial encoun-
ter(s), and more broadly, the relationship
between the constructs of East and West as
they have shaped anti-colonial nationalist pro-
jects on the one hand, and the complex
dynamics between processes ofglobalization
and the post-colonial nation-state on the other
(Abu-Lughod, 1998). rn

Suggested reading
Mitchell (2002c); Parajuli (1991); Sachs (1992).

wetlands Covering about 6 per cent of the
Earth’s land area (Turner, 1991), wetlands

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WETLANDS
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