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  1. History as the Story of Liberty.Benedetto Croce - 1970 - W. W. Norton.
    Written in 1938 when the Western world had succumbed to the notion that history is a creature of blind force. A reviewer at the time noted the importance of Croce's belief that "the central trend in the evolution of man is the unfolding of new potentialities, and that the task of the historian is to discover and emphasise this trend: the story of liberty". As Croce himself writes, "Even in the darkest and crassest times liberty trembles in the lines of (...)
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  • The Consequences of Modernity.Anthony Giddens - 1990
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  • The global age: state and society beyond modernity.Martin Albrow - 1996 - Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press.
    Taking issue with those who see recent social transformations as an extension of modernity, the author contends that social theory must confront an epochal change from the modern era to a new era of globality, in which human beings can conceive of forces at work on a global scale, and in which they espouse values that take the globe as their reference point. The book begins by assessing the problems of writing about modernity, showing how narratives of an endlessly self-perpetuating (...)
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  • Globalization: Social Theory and Global Culture.Roland Robertson - 1992 - SAGE.
    A stimulating appraisal of a crucial contemporary theme, this comprehensive analysis of globalizaton offers a distinctively cultural perspective on the social theory of the contemporary world. This perspective considers the world as a whole, going beyond conventional distinctions between the global and the local and between the universal and the particular. Its cultural approach emphasizes the political and economic significance of shifting conceptions of, and forms of participation in, an increasingly compressed world. At the same time the book shows why (...)
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  • Civilizations as Zones of Prestige and Social Contact.Randall Collins - 2004 - In Said Amir Arjomand & Edward A. Tiryakian (eds.), Rethinking Civilizational Analysis. Sage Publications. pp. 132--147.
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  • Social Theory And The Concept Of Civilisation.Johann P. Arnason - 1988 - Thesis Eleven 20 (1):87-105.
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