{"title":"Book Review: The myth of continents: A critique of Metageography","authors":"Xing Fang","doi":"10.1177/18793665221129885","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"The construct of continents has been a widely accepted global spatial structure in academic and popular discourse as well as a common framework of global geography and history in school education today. However, Martin W. Lewis and Kären E. Wigen contend that this over-simplified meta-geography is grounded mainly on ethnocentrism and environmental determinism and ignores the complex reality and diversity of human communities around the globe. In contrast, they adopt a moderate post-modern approach, which accentuates fluidity and multiplicity, to challenge the conceptions such as continents, West and East, nation-states and isolated civilizations that co-construct a static order of the world. In order to rectify the flaws of meta-geography, they propose a revised scheme of the world regions that emerged in the North American academia, and they believe that this scheme could liberate geographical and historical studies from the misconceptions, reflect more accurately the socio-cultural reality of a highly interconnected world, and promote further debate regarding meta-geography. The organized style of composition is a notable strength of the book. In Chapter 1, the authors present a review of the historical development of the scheme of continents and introduce the fallacy of environmental determinism underlying the scheme as well as the little utility of the scheme in geology. Chapter 2 and Chapter 3 deconstruct West and East as spatial and cultural notions, reveal the arbitrary nature of the West-East division driven by Euro-centrism, and evidence that the imagined boundary between the West and the East has been shifting in response to the practice of the West to construct a central Western image and tradition composed of rationality, democracy and economic progress. In Chapter 4, the authors mainly discuss and criticize Eurocentrism and Afro-centrism, which are both forms of ethnocentrism. They also point out the inappropriate use of race as a geographical concept because race is merely a social construct and the distribution of the “racial” characteristics does not correspond with the continents. Chapter 5 reviews Arnold Toynbee’s scheme of isolated civilizations for carving up the world and elucidates a paradigm shift to a refined world-system theory, which considers both civilized and uncivilized areas of the world and emphasizes the cultural interconnectivity among civilizations and world regions. In Chapter 6, the authors present their revised “world region” scheme by elaborating on the challenges of treating Southeast Asia, Central Asia and Latin America as a single region. They finally conclude the book with ten principles for meta-geographical reforms and emphasize the importance of historical and cultural connections in the division of regions. They also suggest directions for further research such as non-Western people’s view of the globe, the impacts of European geography on non-European intellectual framework, sea communities as well as international flows of capital, commodities, and labor. Behind the clear structure of the book are the authors’ tremendous efforts to reveal the arbitrary biases and logical flaws hidden in the language and conventions of metageography and their rigorous attempts to demonstrate the fact that regions of the world are not isolated but have long-","PeriodicalId":39195,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Eurasian Studies","volume":"32 1","pages":"82 - 83"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2022-09-26","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of Eurasian Studies","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1177/18793665221129885","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q1","JCRName":"Arts and Humanities","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
The construct of continents has been a widely accepted global spatial structure in academic and popular discourse as well as a common framework of global geography and history in school education today. However, Martin W. Lewis and Kären E. Wigen contend that this over-simplified meta-geography is grounded mainly on ethnocentrism and environmental determinism and ignores the complex reality and diversity of human communities around the globe. In contrast, they adopt a moderate post-modern approach, which accentuates fluidity and multiplicity, to challenge the conceptions such as continents, West and East, nation-states and isolated civilizations that co-construct a static order of the world. In order to rectify the flaws of meta-geography, they propose a revised scheme of the world regions that emerged in the North American academia, and they believe that this scheme could liberate geographical and historical studies from the misconceptions, reflect more accurately the socio-cultural reality of a highly interconnected world, and promote further debate regarding meta-geography. The organized style of composition is a notable strength of the book. In Chapter 1, the authors present a review of the historical development of the scheme of continents and introduce the fallacy of environmental determinism underlying the scheme as well as the little utility of the scheme in geology. Chapter 2 and Chapter 3 deconstruct West and East as spatial and cultural notions, reveal the arbitrary nature of the West-East division driven by Euro-centrism, and evidence that the imagined boundary between the West and the East has been shifting in response to the practice of the West to construct a central Western image and tradition composed of rationality, democracy and economic progress. In Chapter 4, the authors mainly discuss and criticize Eurocentrism and Afro-centrism, which are both forms of ethnocentrism. They also point out the inappropriate use of race as a geographical concept because race is merely a social construct and the distribution of the “racial” characteristics does not correspond with the continents. Chapter 5 reviews Arnold Toynbee’s scheme of isolated civilizations for carving up the world and elucidates a paradigm shift to a refined world-system theory, which considers both civilized and uncivilized areas of the world and emphasizes the cultural interconnectivity among civilizations and world regions. In Chapter 6, the authors present their revised “world region” scheme by elaborating on the challenges of treating Southeast Asia, Central Asia and Latin America as a single region. They finally conclude the book with ten principles for meta-geographical reforms and emphasize the importance of historical and cultural connections in the division of regions. They also suggest directions for further research such as non-Western people’s view of the globe, the impacts of European geography on non-European intellectual framework, sea communities as well as international flows of capital, commodities, and labor. Behind the clear structure of the book are the authors’ tremendous efforts to reveal the arbitrary biases and logical flaws hidden in the language and conventions of metageography and their rigorous attempts to demonstrate the fact that regions of the world are not isolated but have long-
大陆的建构已成为学术和大众话语中广泛接受的全球空间结构,也是当今学校教育中全球地理和历史的共同框架。然而,Martin W. Lewis和Kären E. Wigen认为,这种过于简化的元地理学主要建立在种族中心主义和环境决定论的基础上,忽视了全球人类社区的复杂现实和多样性。相反,他们采用了一种温和的后现代方法,强调流动性和多样性,挑战诸如大陆、西方和东方、民族国家和孤立文明等概念,这些概念共同构建了一个静态的世界秩序。为了纠正元地理学的缺陷,他们提出了北美学术界出现的世界区域修正方案,并认为该方案可以将地理和历史研究从误解中解放出来,更准确地反映高度互联世界的社会文化现实,并促进关于元地理学的进一步讨论。有组织的写作风格是这本书的一个显著优点。在第一章中,作者回顾了大陆学说的历史发展,并介绍了这种学说背后的环境决定论的谬误,以及这种学说在地质学上的小用处。第二章和第三章解构了作为空间和文化概念的西方和东方,揭示了欧洲中心主义驱动下的东西方划分的任意性,并证明了西方在构建一个由理性、民主和经济进步组成的西方中心形象和传统的实践中,西方和东方之间的想象边界正在发生变化。第四章主要对欧洲中心主义和非洲中心主义这两种种族中心主义形式进行了讨论和批判。他们还指出,使用种族作为地理概念是不恰当的,因为种族仅仅是一种社会结构,“种族”特征的分布不符合各大洲。第五章回顾了阿诺德·汤因比分割世界的孤立文明方案,并阐明了一种范式转变,即考虑到世界上的文明和不文明地区,并强调文明和世界地区之间的文化互联性。在第6章中,作者通过阐述将东南亚、中亚和拉丁美洲作为一个单一地区所面临的挑战,提出了他们修订后的“世界区域”计划。最后,他们总结了元地理改革的十项原则,并强调了历史和文化联系在区域划分中的重要性。他们还提出了进一步研究的方向,如非西方人对全球的看法,欧洲地理对非欧洲知识框架的影响,海洋社区以及资本,商品和劳动力的国际流动。在这本书清晰的结构背后,作者们付出了巨大的努力,揭示了隐藏在元地理学语言和惯例中的武断偏见和逻辑缺陷,他们严谨地试图证明世界上的地区不是孤立的,而是长期存在的