Javascript must be enabled to continue!
The Eurocentric Fallacy. A Digital-Historical Approach to the Concepts of ‘Modernity’, ‘Civilization’ and ‘Europe’ (1840–1990)
View through CrossRef
According to recent literature, the idea of Europe as it developed during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries coincided closely with the concepts of ‘civilization’ and ‘modernity’. This article examines this claim by testing the existence of modernity, civilization and Europe as a conceptual ‘trinity’ by using digital history techniques. Word frequencies, collocations and word embeddings are employed to analyze four Dutch newspapers (Algemeen Handelsblad, Nieuwe Rotterdamsche Courant, De Telegraaf, De Leeuwarder Courant) spanning the period 1840–1990. It transpires that semantic relations between the three elements are hardly visible; in so far as they appear, they hardly constitute a close-knit ‘trinity’. Alternating combinations among the three components were more significant than direct connections between all three, while ‘the West’ was more central than Europe. These findings suggest that popular media like newspapers have a different take on culturalpolitical concepts than writings by the intellectual elite.
Title: The Eurocentric Fallacy. A Digital-Historical Approach to the Concepts of ‘Modernity’, ‘Civilization’ and ‘Europe’ (1840–1990)
Description:
According to recent literature, the idea of Europe as it developed during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries coincided closely with the concepts of ‘civilization’ and ‘modernity’.
This article examines this claim by testing the existence of modernity, civilization and Europe as a conceptual ‘trinity’ by using digital history techniques.
Word frequencies, collocations and word embeddings are employed to analyze four Dutch newspapers (Algemeen Handelsblad, Nieuwe Rotterdamsche Courant, De Telegraaf, De Leeuwarder Courant) spanning the period 1840–1990.
It transpires that semantic relations between the three elements are hardly visible; in so far as they appear, they hardly constitute a close-knit ‘trinity’.
Alternating combinations among the three components were more significant than direct connections between all three, while ‘the West’ was more central than Europe.
These findings suggest that popular media like newspapers have a different take on culturalpolitical concepts than writings by the intellectual elite.
Related Results
Shaping the Discourse on Modernity
Shaping the Discourse on Modernity
In this opening article, the editors of History, Culture and Modernity provide an overview of recent debates relating to “modernity”, inviting prospective authors to participate in...
Did Jesus Commit a Fallacy?
Did Jesus Commit a Fallacy?
Jesus has been accused of committing a fallacy (of denying the antecedent) at John 8:47. Careful analysis of this text (1) reveals a hitherto unrecognized valid form of argument
wh...
Ethiopia, Europe and Modernity: A Preliminary Sketch
Ethiopia, Europe and Modernity: A Preliminary Sketch
This paper explores some of the issues of cultural epistemology which underlie the relations between Ethiopia and Europe. It briefly explores the origins of modern diplomatic cont...
Digital Anthropological photography
Digital Anthropological photography
Despite the fact that in recent years the anthropologist's arsenal has significantly expanded due to the intro-duction of digital 3D scanning, computed tomography, microtomography,...
Towards a Non-Eurocentric Analysis of the World Crisis: Reconsidering Patočka’s Approach
Towards a Non-Eurocentric Analysis of the World Crisis: Reconsidering Patočka’s Approach
Abstract
The paper tackles Patočka’s ideas on the world crisis and on the possibility that it may be overcome. The key flaw in Patočka’s approach, one which also underpins his Euro...
Beyond Diversity
Beyond Diversity
The overwhelming popularity in academic writing of such concepts as transnationalism, anti-essentialism and postcolonialism illustrate the impact of the postmodern critique of once...
A Roadmap to Applied Digital Heritage
A Roadmap to Applied Digital Heritage
The recent “digital turn” in archaeology has driven methodological advances and opened new research avenues, with wide ranging impacts at multiple scales. The proliferation ...
Abstract concepts: external influences, internal constraints, and methodological issues
Abstract concepts: external influences, internal constraints, and methodological issues
AbstractThere is a longstanding and widely held misconception about the relative remoteness of abstract concepts from concrete experiences. This review examines the current evidenc...