The Clash of Civilizations and the Remaking of World Order

English language

Published Aug. 2, 2011

ISBN:
978-1-4516-2897-5
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4 stars (2 reviews)

The Clash of Civilizations is a thesis that people's cultural and religious identities will be the primary source of conflict in the post–Cold War world. The American political scientist Samuel P. Huntington argued that future wars would be fought not between countries, but between cultures. It was proposed in a 1992 lecture at the American Enterprise Institute, which was then developed in a 1993 Foreign Affairs article titled "The Clash of Civilizations?", in response to his former student Francis Fukuyama's 1992 book, The End of History and the Last Man. Huntington later expanded his thesis in a 1996 book The Clash of Civilizations and the Remaking of World Order.The phrase itself was earlier used by Albert Camus in 1946, by Girilal Jain in his analysis of the Ayodhya dispute in 1988, by Bernard Lewis in an article in the September 1990 issue of The Atlantic Monthly titled "The Roots of …

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In my endeavour to understand the world we are living in, I re-read recently Samuel Huntington’s book “The Clash of Civilizations.” When I first read it, late in the 1990s, the Berlin Wall had fallen and the one-mighty Soviet Union had been dissolved. It was the End of the Cold War, or according to Francis Fukuyama, the End of History, where humanity was moving towards a state of idealised harmony through the mechanisms of liberal democracy. There was an optimistic view of the world, or perhaps, there was an optimistic view of the world in the Western world. Yet, somehow, I fretted that Huntington’s world view could become “a self-fulfilling prophecy.”

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