Abstract

ABSTRACT This paper examines Arif Dirlik’s work on the Asia-Pacific region’s transformation into a “model region of globalization.” Writing amidst the crisis of the Social Sciences, Dirlik analyzed how global capitalism’s drive to simultaneously homogenize and fragment the world, a condition he termed “global modernity,” had not only restructured the Asia-Pacific region so as to meet the demands of a new flexible mode of production, but also transformed knowledge production about the world, giving way to an endless splintering of knowledge that reinforced the logics of global capitalism and foreclosed any possibility for radical critique. Drawing on Asian American studies, Pacific Studies and Indigenous Studies, which emerged in the Asian-Pacific borderlands between social activism and the academy, Dirlik called attention to the local as the primary site of inquiry and advocated for radical scholarly and activist approaches grounded in a “critical localism” against the hegemony of global capitalism. This paper explores how Dirlik’s work on the Asia-Pacific region generates the possibility for crafting what the anarchist sociologist Philippe Corcuff describes as “fragile epistemologies” of the plural social global.

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