Cycles of Hegemony and Labor Unrest in the Contemporary World System

Author(s):  
Beverly J. Silver
boundary 2 ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 46 (4) ◽  
pp. 157-180
Author(s):  
Christopher Chen

This essay offers a reading of what could be called a metrological imaginary at work in the writing of Korean American experimental poet Myung Mi Kim and in particular in Kim’s third book, Dura. In Dura, Kim traces a jagged itinerary through the archives of the Atlantic slave trade, imperial networks of exchange, and the settler colonial seizure and parcelization of indigenous lands in order to form the United States. The book continually deploys a quantitative language of number and measure, I argue, in order to highlight how emergent capitalist social relations bind together otherwise discrepant histories of enslavement, dispossession, and exclusion. A kind of historical primer preoccupied with the ways in which space, time, bodies, and laboring activity are rendered measurable and exchangeable, Dura traces the transformation of an older colonial racial order into a contemporary world-system that Cedric Robinson and others have called “racial capitalism.”


Turyzm ◽  
2002 ◽  
Vol 12 (2) ◽  
pp. 51-63
Author(s):  
Antoni Jackowski ◽  
Danuta Ptaszycka-Jackowska ◽  
Izabela Sołjan

The discussion focuses on the notion of the world system of pilgrimage centres and the phenomenon of pilgrimage in the contemporary world. The authors emphasize the correlations among the centres, resulting from both their spatial and functional structure. The most significant pilgrimage centres in individual religions have been mentioned, with particular consideration of the Christian ones. Towards the end of the article, the main development trends in pilgrimage migrations and destinations have been outlined.


2013 ◽  
Vol 2 (3) ◽  
pp. 233-256
Author(s):  
Leonardo Ramos

The current article intends to present and articulate the potentiality of two approaches and, specially, of two concepts, with the aim to understand the emerging middle powers and their role in the contemporary world politics: world-system – and the idea of Semi-periphery; and neo gramscian – and the idea of transnationalization of the State.


2018 ◽  
Vol 6 (3) ◽  
pp. 19-28
Author(s):  
M. Zharikov

The general outcomes of this article come from a hypothesis that expanding the BRICS currencies in the contemporary World System of Currencies (WSC) is going to be a major driver of reinforcing financial stability and transforming the WSC by means of the internationalisation process as a result of direct international settlements as well as through purchasing them using currency vehicles at the national foreign exchange markets. As a result there emerges a need to analyse the BRICS currencies’ circulation abroad, identifying the stages and directions of their internationalisation, considering the role they may play in the future development of the economies and near-by regions, their cooperation in mutual trade, investment flows, technology exchange, research and development, energy, financial stability and economic security. The article is especially time-relevant since the yuan is becoming a world reserve currency that may change the structure and the mechanism of the WSC.


2013 ◽  
pp. 175-180 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christopher Chase-Dunn

This essay uses the evolutionary world-systems perspective to address questions about the current crises in the global system. This approach analyzes the structure and changing institutional nature of the whole world-system over the past 500 years, with attention to comparisons with earlier regional world-systems (Chase-Dunn and Lerro 2013). The main idea is that the waves of global integration have been driven by system-wide class and national struggles in which the elites of core states contend with one another and the most successful are those that can effectively deal with the resistance from below. This has produced a spiral of capitalism and socialism that has been connected with the rise and fall of hegemons.


2010 ◽  
Vol 3 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Scott Nicholas Romaniuk ◽  
Joshua Kenneth Wasylciw ◽  
Christopher Douglas Mott

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