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The Philosophy of Parochialism (Hardcover)

The Philosophy of Parochialism Cover Image
By Radomir Konstantinovic, Ljiljana Nikolic (Translated by), Branislav Jakovljevic (Translated by)
$102.00
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Description


The Philosophy of Parochialism is Radomir Konstantinović’s (1928–2011) most celebrated and reviled book. First published in Belgrade as Filosofija palanke in 1969, it attracted keen attention and controversy through its unsparing critique of Serbian and any other nationalism in Yugoslavia and beyond. The book was prophetic, seeming to anticipate not only the bloody disintegration of Yugoslavia in the 1990s, but also the totalitarian turn in politics across the globe in the first decades of the new century. With this translation, English-speaking audiences can at last discover one of the most original writers of eastern European late modernism, and gain an important and original perspective into contemporary politics and culture in the West and beyond. This is a book that seems to age in reverse, as its meanings become deeper and more universal with the passage of time.

Konstantinović’sbookresists easy classification, mixing classical, Montaigne-like essay, prose poetry, novel, and literary history. The word “philosophy” in the book’s title refers to the solitary activity of reflection and critical thinking, and is also paradoxical: according to the author, a defining characteristic of parochialism is precisely its intolerance toward this kind of self-reflexivity. In Konstantinović’s analysis, parochialism is not a simply a characteristic of a geographical region or a cultural, political, and historical formation—these are all just manifestations of the parochial spirit as the spirit of insularity. His book illuminates the current moment, in which insularity undergirds not only ethnic and national divisions, but also dictates the very structure of everyday life, and where individuals can easily find themselves locked in an echo chamber of social media. The Philosophy of Parochialism can help us understand better not only the dead ends of ethnic nationalism and other atavistic ideologies, but also of those cultural forces such as digital technologies that have been built on the promise of overcoming those ideologies.

About the Author


Radomir Konstantinović (1928–2011) was a Serbian poet and novelist.

Praise For…


“It is hard to exaggerate the importance of this book in the intellectual life of Serbia and Yugoslavia, and even to the intellectual history of the Balkans and modern Europe in general. The translation by Nikolic and Jakovljevic is excellent.”
–John K. Cox, North Dakota State University
 
— John K. Cox

“A virtually unique example of indigenous Balkan discourse independent of European philosophy. . . .  developed as a study of the spirit of the palanka or market-town mentality, Konstantinovic’s book discerns at the margin of Enlightened Europe an oppositional rationality, the provincial mind versus Hegelian cosmopolitan reason. While the latter is open to the world with relational subjectivity, the reasoning of the provincial mind closes itself into a subjectivity that excludes the world.”
—Dušan I. Bjelic, from the introduction to Balkan as Metaphor: Between Globalization and Fragmentation
— Dušan I. Bjelic

“It is hard to exaggerate the importance of this book in the intellectual life of Serbia and Yugoslavia, and even to the intellectual history of the Balkans and modern Europe in general. The translation by Nikolić and Jakovljević is excellent.”
–John K. Cox, North Dakota State University
 

“A virtually unique example of indigenous Balkan discourse independent of European philosophy. . . .  developed as a study of the spirit of the palanka or market-town mentality, Konstantinović’s book discerns at the margin of Enlightened Europe an oppositional rationality, the provincial mind versus Hegelian cosmopolitan reason. While the latter is open to the world with relational subjectivity, the reasoning of the provincial mind closes itself into a subjectivity that excludes the world.”
—Dušan I. Bjelić, from the introduction to Balkan as Metaphor: Between Globalization and Fragmentation
 

“It is hard to exaggerate the importance of this book in the intellectual life of Serbia and Yugoslavia, and even to the intellectual history of the Balkans and modern Europe in general. The translation by Nikolić and Jakovljević is excellent.”
–John K. Cox, North Dakota State University
 
— John K. Cox

“A virtually unique example of indigenous Balkan discourse independent of European philosophy. . . .  developed as a study of the spirit of the palanka or market-town mentality, Konstantinović’s book discerns at the margin of Enlightened Europe an oppositional rationality, the provincial mind versus Hegelian cosmopolitan reason. While the latter is open to the world with relational subjectivity, the reasoning of the provincial mind closes itself into a subjectivity that excludes the world.”
—Dušan I. Bjelić, from the introduction to Balkan as Metaphor: Between Globalization and Fragmentation
— Dušan I. Bjelic

Product Details
ISBN: 9780472132720
ISBN-10: 0472132725
Publisher: University of Michigan Press
Publication Date: October 7th, 2021
Pages: 366
Language: English