1st Edition

The Civilizing Process and the Past We Now Abhor Slavery, Cat-Burning, and the Colonialism of Time

By Bruce Fleming Copyright 2022
    150 Pages
    by Routledge

    150 Pages
    by Routledge

    Drawing on the thought of Norbert Elias and using as a thread a purposely apolitical example of cruelty to animals to focus on changes in attitudes, this book explores the ways in which we deal with a past that we now abhor. As we struggle to deal with the fact that our past shapes us—indeed is us, but is not us—and cannot be changed, the modern tendency is to demand merely cosmetic rather than real changes to the world and to judge harshly the individuals with whom the past is populated, pulling down statues or re-naming institutions. An examination of our modern colonialism of time rather than place, which refuses to consider or accept the fact that without our past, we wouldn’t be here at all, let alone in a position to judge, The Civilizing Process and the Past We Now Abhor will appeal to scholars and students of sociology, cultural studies, and literature with interests in contemporary questions of race, morality, and efforts to correct the wrongs of our past.

    Introduction: The Problem

    1. Bad Manners

    2. Woody

    3. Past Produces Present

    4. Slavery

    5. Explanations

    6. Rituals

    7. The Modern Age

    8. Democracy

    9. Durkheim

    10. Groupthink

    11. The Polyglot West

    12. Changes

    13. People and Pets

    14. Reparations

    15. Forty Years in the Wilderness

    Biography

    Bruce Fleming is Professor of English at the US Naval Academy and is the author of The End of the Modernist Era in Arts and Academia, Why Liberals and Conservatives Clash, Sexual Ethics: Liberal vs. Conservative, and The New Tractatus: Summing Up Everything, among other works.