Autorenbild.

Samir Amin (1931–2018)

Autor von Eurocentrism

111+ Werke 1,117 Mitglieder 7 Rezensionen

Über den Autor

Samir Amin was born in Cairo in 1931 of an Egyptian father and a French mother. He was director of the Third World Forum and president of the World Forum for Alternatives. He died in Paris in August 2018.

Beinhaltet den Namen: Samir Amīn

Werke von Samir Amin

Eurocentrism (1989) 137 Exemplare
Neo-Colonialism in West Africa (1971) 35 Exemplare
Dynamik der globalen Krise (1961) 26 Exemplare
The Arab Nation (1978) 16 Exemplare
The Future of Maoism (1981) 16 Exemplare
El desarrollo desigual (1986) 4 Exemplare
Theory is history (2013) 4 Exemplare
The Implosion of Capitalism (2013) 3 Exemplare
MAS ALLA DEL CAPITALISMO SENIL (2003) 3 Exemplare
Sobre la transición (1975) 3 Exemplare
El capitalismo contemporáneo (2013) 3 Exemplare
Emperyalizm Ve Esitsiz Gelisme (1992) 2 Exemplare
Como sera 1984? (1976) 2 Exemplare
Oltre la mondializzazione (1999) 1 Exemplar
Irak et Syrie, 1960-1980 (1982) 1 Exemplar
Pour un monde multipolaire (2005) 1 Exemplar
Dinamica de la crisis global (Spanish Edition) (1999) — Autor — 1 Exemplar
Dusuk yogunluklu demokrasi (1994) 1 Exemplar

Zugehörige Werke

The Future of Socialism: Perspectives from the Left (1990) — Mitwirkender — 8 Exemplare

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Wissenswertes

Geburtstag
1931-09-03
Todestag
2018-08-12
Geschlecht
male
Nationalität
Egypt
Wohnorte
Dakar, Senegal

Mitglieder

Rezensionen

Kind of a mixed bag. It talks about a lot of stuff that's important and every so often mentions something useful and interesting but I feel that on the whole it doesn't really come across as coherent. For example, I don't really have a clear definition of his idea of Eurocentrism. Every time he seemed about to talk about it explicitly, he went on to something else. It's almost certain it's, to a large degree, down to me being a bad reader, but it was definitely frustrating. I feel some of it might be down to translation but it still leaves a lot of times when he starts talking about something and I'm confused as to what he's referring to or don't see the link. One thing that's unusual is that he talks about religion a *lot* - it's a major part of the book. Again though, it wasn't clear in what ways he thought religion relates to Eurocentrism etc - what he talks about is very interesting on its own but it doesn't mesh together well. Near the end, he starts talking about global value which is a fascinating and important topic but he says it's not relevant here and doesn't go into it. Yet the conclusion of the book as a whole is just a page saying that worldwide value is the key to everything.

Ultimately, it said a lot of valuable stuff that I think could do with being talked about more and is generally kept out of view, but didn't say it coherently enough or in enough detail to make it a valuable guide for those looking to challenge Eurocentrism by itself. I appreciated it and what I learned from it, but not enough to make it a strong recommendation.
… (mehr)
 
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tombomp | Oct 31, 2023 |
Maybe not anything particularly new, but a well-written summary - if obviously condensed - of the problems of liberalism and American political thought. Made me think more about how USA-centric a lot of discourse is. The last quarter is his geopolitical ideas to combat the USA, which are interesting and not focused on Marxist ideas, although I can't make much informed comment about them. Overall I really appreciate his style, which is a lot clearer than a lot of writers and doesn't do a load of equivocation - it focuses on the issues at hand and I wish others would take note. An enjoyable read.… (mehr)
 
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tombomp | 1 weitere Rezension | Oct 31, 2023 |
 
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Murtra | Nov 11, 2020 |
A book about liberalism that speaks neither of Grotius nor Locke? This book is really about imperial capitalism, a kind of critique against the policies of war and Washington Consensus - not against liberal ideology. Amin belongs to the French post-colonial sphere and wrote the book in French before it was translated, which may be why “liberal,” gets lost in translation. Although he does, in the fourth chapter of the book, formally seem to want to speak of ideology, he is so engulfed in his positionality of critic that at no point does he take time to define what he is criticising - liberalism - as it understands itself on its own terms. One would hope this would be a departure point, if not necessarily the departure point. Unfortunately, he doesn’t say much that is new to me, and what he does say isn't structured to be explicit enough to make this a primary text of reference. While The Liberal Virus is largely good, neomarxist fare, I wouldn't recommend it over, say, E.M. Wood's The Origin of Capitalism or, if your interest was actually liberalism as an ideological system, say, Domenico Losurdo’s work on that topic.… (mehr)
 
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GeorgeHunter | 1 weitere Rezension | Sep 13, 2020 |

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Werke
111
Auch von
1
Mitglieder
1,117
Beliebtheit
#22,994
Bewertung
2.9
Rezensionen
7
ISBNs
229
Sprachen
13

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