articleDistinktion Journal of Social TheoryJan 2, 2015Closed access

What's wrong with a one-world world?

The Open University

Indexed incrossref

Abstract

Western assumptions about the character of the world tend to distinguish between nature, the natural, or the physical on the one hand, and culture, people, and their beliefs on the other: between mononaturalism and multiculturalism. This argument has been well rehearsed in post-colonial and anthropological literatures where it is linked to dominatory or hegemonic ‘Northern’ strategies which naturalize mononaturalism and reduce indigenous realities to beliefs which may be discounted. In this paper I use STS (science, technology, and society) to show that the ‘North’ is not mono-natural, and that the enactment of mononaturalism is (1) indeed an enactment and (2) only partial. The argument is that in the ‘North’…

Citation impact

581
total citations
FWCI
31.47
Percentile
100%
References
55
Citations per year

Authors

1

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Argument (complex analysis)
  • Craft
  • Hegemony
  • Indigenous
  • Natural (archaeology)
  • Multiculturalism
  • Sociology
  • Epistemology
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Reduced inequalities
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