Reorient

by
Format: Hardcover
Pub. Date: 1998-07-01
Publisher(s): Univ of California Pr
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Summary

Andre Gunder Frank asks us toReOrientour views away from Eurocentrism--to see the rise of the West as a mere blip in what was, and is again becoming, an Asia-centered world. In a bold challenge to received historiography and social theory he turns on its head the world according to Marx, Weber, and other theorists, including Polanyi, Rostow, Braudel, and Wallerstein. Frank explains the Rise of the West in world economic and demographic terms that relate it in a single historical sweep to the decline of the East around 1800. European states, he says, used the silver extracted from the American colonies to buy entry into an expanding Asian market that already flourished in the global economy. Resorting to import substitution and export promotion in the world market, they became Newly Industrializing Economies and tipped the global economic balance to the West. That is precisely what East Asia is doing today, Frank points out, to recover its traditional dominance. As a result, the "center" of the world economy is once again moving to the "Middle Kingdom" of China. Anyone interested in Asia, in world systems and world economic and social history, in international relations, and in comparative area studies, will have to take into account Frank's exciting reassessment of our global economic past and future.

Table of Contents

PREFACE xv
1 Introduction to Real World History vs. Eurocentric Social Theory
1(51)
Holistic Methodology and Objectives
1(7)
Globalism, not Eurocentrism
8(26)
Smith, Marx, and Weber
12(8)
Contemporary Eurocentrism and Its Critics
20(4)
Economic Historians
24(2)
Limitations of Recent Social Theory
26(8)
Outline of a Global Economic Perspective
34(4)
Anticipating and Confronting Resistance and Obstacles
38(14)
2 The Global Trade Carousel 1400-1800
52(79)
An Introduction to the World Economy
52(11)
Thirteenth-and Fourteenth-Century Antecedents
56(3)
The Columbian Exchange and Its Consequences
59(2)
Some Neglected Features in the World Economy
61(2)
World Division of Labor and Balances of Trade
63(68)
Mapping the Global Economy
64(6)
The Americas
70(1)
Africa
71(3)
Europe
74(1)
West Asia
75(3)
The Ottomans
78(4)
Safavid Persia
82(2)
India and the Indian Ocean
84(6)
North India
90(1)
Gujarat and Malabar
90(1)
Coromandel
90(1)
Bengal
91(1)
Southeast Asia
92(5)
Archipellago and Islands
97(4)
Mainland
101(3)
Japan
104(4)
China
108(1)
Population, Production, and Trade
109(2)
China in the World Economy
111(6)
Central Asia
117(6)
Russia and the Baltics
123(3)
Summary of a Sinocentric World Economy
126(5)
3 Money Went Around the World and Made the World Go Round
131(34)
World Money: Its Production and Exchange
131(20)
Micro-and Macro-Attractions in the Global Casino
133(6)
Dealing and Playing in the Global Casino
139(3)
The Numbers Game
142(1)
Silver
143(6)
Gold
149(1)
Credit
150(1)
How Did the Winners Use Their Money?
151(14)
The Hoarding Thesis
152(1)
Inflation or Production in the Quantity Theory of Money
153(5)
Money Expanded the Frontiers of Settlement and Production
158(1)
In India
158(2)
In China
160(2)
Elsewhere in Asia
162(3)
4 The Global Economy: Comparisons and Relations
165(61)
Quantities: Population, Production, Productivity, Income, and Trade
166(19)
Population, Production, and Income
167(7)
Productivity and Competitiveness
174(4)
World Trade 1400-1800
178(7)
Qualities: Science and Technology
185(20)
Eurocentrism Regarding Science and Technology in Asia
185(10)
Guns
195(2)
Ships
197(3)
Printing
200(1)
Textiles
200(2)
Metallurgy, Coal, and Power
202(1)
Transport
203(1)
World Technological Development
204(1)
Mechanisms: Economic and Financial Institutions
205(21)
Comparing and Relating Asian and European Institutions
208(1)
Global Institutional Relations
209(5)
In India
214(4)
In China
218(8)
5 Horizontally Integrative Macrohistory
226(32)
Simultaneity Is No Coincidence
228(2)
Doing Horizontally Integrative Macrohistory
230(28)
Demographic/Structural Analysis
230(1)
A "Seventeenth-Century Crisis"?
231(6)
The 1640 Silver Crises
237(11)
Kondratieff Analysis
248(3)
The 1762-1790 Kondratieff "B" Phase: Crisis and Recessions
251(4)
A More Horizontally Integrative Macrohistory?
255(3)
6 Why Did the West Win (Temporarily)?
258(63)
Is There a Long-Cycle Roller Coaster?
260(4)
The Decline of the East Preceded the Rise of the West
264(12)
The Decline in India
267(4)
The Decline Elsewhere in Asia
271(5)
How Did the West Rise?
276(21)
Climbing Up on Asian Shoulders
277(6)
Supply and Demand for Technological Change
283(11)
Supplies and Sources of Capital
294(3)
A Global Economic Demographic Explanation
297(24)
A Demographic Economic Model
298(2)
A High-Level Equilibrium Trap?
300(8)
The Evidence: 1500-1750
308(1)
The 1750 Inflection
309(3)
Challenging and Reformulating the Explanation
312(2)
The Resulting Transformations in India, China, Europe, and the World
314(1)
In India
314(1)
In China
315(1)
In Western Europe
316(1)
The Rest of the World
317(1)
Past Conclusions and Future Implications
318(3)
7 Historigraphic Conclusions and Theoretical Implications
321(40)
Historiographic Conclusions: The Eurocentric Emperor Has No Clothes
322(17)
The Asiatic Mode of Production
322(2)
European Exceptionalism
324(3)
A European World-System or a Global Economy?
327(1)
1500: Continuity or Break?
328(2)
Capitalism?
330(2)
Hegemony?
332(1)
The Rise of the West and the Industrial Revolution
333(1)
Empty Categories and Procrustean Beds
334(5)
Theoretical Implications: Through the Global Looking Glass
339(22)
Holism vs. Partialism
340(1)
Commonality/Similarity vs. Specificity/Differences
341(1)
Continuity vs. Discontinuities
342(2)
Horizontal Integration vs. Vertical Separation
344(3)
Cycles vs. Linearity
347(4)
Agency vs. Structure
351(1)
Europe in the World Economic Nutshell
352(5)
Jihad vs. McWorld in the Anarchy of the Clash of Civilizations?
357(4)
REFERENCES 361(28)
INDEX 389

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