The social sciences in Asia, like most other disciplines, were introduced by the West and continue to look towards them for inspiration, affirmation and legitimacy. There is now a growing awareness amongst scholars and students about the need for developing Asia-centric social sciences in order to better appreciate Asian realities. Written against this background, this book addresses a set of problems surrounding the state of the social science in Asia. It contextualizes these problems by pointing to the historical and continuing dominance over Asian social science discourses by Western paradigms and concepts. Syed Farid Alatas documents various critiques of the state of the social sciences in Asia and critically assesses the prescriptions for alternative discourses that have emerged from these critically assesses the prescriptions for alternative discourses that have emerged from these critiques. These critiques address problems such as Orientalism, Eurocentrism, the captive mind, academic imperialism and dependency. These critiques have variously generated pleas for alternative discourses, for decolonized knowledge and for indigenized social sciences. However, the author maintains, these calls for alternative discourses in the social sciences are not without their own problems. He, therefore, goes beyond documentation and critical assessment to the explicit conceptualization of relevant and irrelevant social science. Among the important of this book are that it has a pan-Asian focus and that it incorporates perspectives drawn from sociology, anthropology, and the theory and philosophy of the social sciences.
Alternative Discourses in Asian Social Science
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Title
Alternative Discourses in Asian Social Science
Author
Edition
1st ed.
Publisher
ISBN
8178295865
Length
226p., Notes; Bibliography; Index; 22cm.
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