The epoch of universalism 1769-1989: L’époque de l’universalisme 1769-1989

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Abstract

2019 witnessed the 30th anniversary of the German reunification. But the remembrance of the fall of the Berlin Wall coincided with another event of global importance that caught much less attention: the 250th anniversary of Napoleon Bonaparte’s birth. There is an undeniable historical and philosophical dimension to this coincidence. Napoleon’s appearance on the scene of world history seems to embody European universalism (soon thereafter in the form of a ‘modern’ imperial project); whilst scholars such as Francis Fukuyama saw in the events of 1989 its historical fulfilment. Today, we see more clearly that the fall of the Berlin Wall stands for an epistemic earthquake, which generated a world that can no longer be grasped through universal concepts. Here, we deal with the idea of Europe and of its relation to the world itself. Picking up on this contingency of world history with an ironic wink, the volume analyses in retrospect the epoch of European universalism. It focusses on its dialectics, polemically addressing and remembering both 1769 and 1989.

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Hofmann, F., & Messling, M. (2020). The epoch of universalism 1769-1989: L’époque de l’universalisme 1769-1989. The Epoch of Universalism 1769-1989 L’époquepoque de l’universalisme 1769-1989 (pp. 1–240). De Gruyter. https://doi.org/10.1515/9783110691504

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