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Countering the Eurocentric myth of the West: discovering the Oriental West
The East as an Early Developer: the East discovers and leads the world through oriental globalisation, 500-1800
Islamic and African pioneers: building the global economy in the Afro-Asian Age of Discovery, 500-1500
Chinese pioneers: the first industrial miracle and the myth of Chinese isolationism, 1000-1800
The East remains dominant: India, Japan and Southeast Asia, 1400-1800
The West was Last: oriental globalisation and the invention of Christendom, 500-1498
Inventing Christendom and the Eastern origins of European feudalism
The myth of the Italian pioneer
The myth of the Vasco de Gama epoch, 1498-1800
The West as a Late-Developer and the advantages of backwardness: oriental grobalisation and the reconstruction of Western Europe as the advanced West, 1492-1850
The myth of 1492 and the impossibility of America: the Afro-Asian contribution to the catch-up of the West, 1492-1700
The Chinese origins of British industrialisation
Constructing European racist identity and the invention of the world, 1700-1850
War, racist imperialism and the Afro-Asian origins of British industrialisation
Conclusion: The Oriental West versus the Eurocentric Myth of the West
The twin myths of the Western liberal state and the civilisational divide between East and West, 1500-1900
The rise of the Oriental West: identity/agency, global structure and contingency.
The East as an Early Developer: the East discovers and leads the world through oriental globalisation, 500-1800
Islamic and African pioneers: building the global economy in the Afro-Asian Age of Discovery, 500-1500
Chinese pioneers: the first industrial miracle and the myth of Chinese isolationism, 1000-1800
The East remains dominant: India, Japan and Southeast Asia, 1400-1800
The West was Last: oriental globalisation and the invention of Christendom, 500-1498
Inventing Christendom and the Eastern origins of European feudalism
The myth of the Italian pioneer
The myth of the Vasco de Gama epoch, 1498-1800
The West as a Late-Developer and the advantages of backwardness: oriental grobalisation and the reconstruction of Western Europe as the advanced West, 1492-1850
The myth of 1492 and the impossibility of America: the Afro-Asian contribution to the catch-up of the West, 1492-1700
The Chinese origins of British industrialisation
Constructing European racist identity and the invention of the world, 1700-1850
War, racist imperialism and the Afro-Asian origins of British industrialisation
Conclusion: The Oriental West versus the Eurocentric Myth of the West
The twin myths of the Western liberal state and the civilisational divide between East and West, 1500-1900
The rise of the Oriental West: identity/agency, global structure and contingency.