Towards a 'new humanism'? Time and emotion in UNESCO's science of world-making, 1947-51
Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
Authors
Colleges, School and Institutes
External organisations
- University of Cambridge
Abstract
This article examines how the newly formed United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO) aimed to construct a programme of social science research that would dispense with determinist theories of racial evolution and promote a new humanism for a post-war world. As scholars and politicians debated the shape of a new world order, they turned towards apparently universal categories of time and emotion to explain both individual behaviours and collective cultures. However, the only time that counted was developmental and the only emotions that mattered were those that could be managed and utilised. This article shows how UNESCO's search for a new humanism remained constrained by racialized discourses that closed down the emancipatory potential of reckoning with the past in the present. The possibilities for open futures, generated by anti-colonial politics and by new institutions of knowledge production, would remain marginalised by the teleology that underpinned UNESCO-sponsored social science.
Bibliographic note
Not yet published as of 01/04/2021.
Details
Original language | English |
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Journal | Journal of World History |
Publication status | Accepted/In press - 19 Mar 2020 |
Keywords
- India, development, emotion, time, psychoanalysis, UNESCO, race