Globalization and Sustainability

A Humanist Agenda

Authors

  • Nina Witoszek University of Oslo

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1558/ecot.2006.11.3.268

Keywords:

globalization, sustainability, humanism, consumers

Abstract

At the core of this contribution are two questions: 1) Is the vision of sustainable development not just ethically justified and economically viable—but captivating enough to clean poisoned wells and restore the structures of the mind? 2) Is the current religious revival in non-European countries a possible ally—or adversary—of positive globalization?

The argument is that among the greatest obstacles to the endeavour of sustainable development is human attraction to stories of excess, profusion, decadence, a sense of ending or shock. People are compelled by the myths of transgression, irreverence, and the hedonist greatness and glory in the same way that they are not drawn to the penitential story of renewable resources, equal distribution. Economic reason and democratic Geist—have either devalued or suppressed human desire for transcendence or muddled values. Those who attempt to renew the environmental narrative through the romance with Eastern spirituality or via the alterglobalist
protest are often either unwitting allies of neoliberal order or lack any coherent plan or vision of the future. The much flaunted ‘postmodern’ mindset is of little use, since it has celebrated the lack of assurance and conviction, and thus launched a quixotic project of founding the social and cultural values on the lack of foundations themselves.

The suggestion is that the search for the solid ground should start, not just from reclaiming the commons but, first of all, from reclaiming the humanist project, which has been lost by Western civilization.

Author Biography

  • Nina Witoszek, University of Oslo
    University of Oslo, Centre for Development and the Environment, Box 1116 Blindern NO-0317 Oslo, Norway

References

Beck, Ulrich, and Anthony Giddens 1994 Reflexive Modernization: Politics, Tradition and Aeshetics in the Modern Social Order (Cambridge: Polity Press).

Bell, Daniel 1980 ‘The Return of the Sacred’, in The Winding Passage. Sociological Essays and Journeys (New Brunswick: Transaction Publishers): 353.

Benhabib, Seyla 2003 ‘Democracy and its Future: Citizenship and Civil Society’, MS., 21st World Congress of Philosophy: Philosophy Facing World Problems, 10–17 August, Istanbul.

Berger, Peter 1986/87 ‘The Decline of Secularism’, National Interest 46: 3.

Brockman, John 2003 The New Humanists. Science at the Edge (New York: Barnes & Noble).

Eliade, Mircea 1994 Commentaires sur la legende de Maitre Manole (L’Herne).

Fukuyama, Francis 1999 ‘Second Thoughts on the End of History’, National Interest 56: 27-28.

Gray, John 2003 ‘Liberalism’s Gray Areas’, The Philosophers’ Magazine (4th quarter): 49-50.

Hardt, Michael, and Anonio Negri 2002 Empire (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press).

Hassner, Pierre 2005 ‘Odwet namietnosci’ (‘The Revenge of Passions’), Europa 71, no. 32.

Herbert, Zbigniew 1986 ‘The Monster of Mr Cogito’, in Report From the Besieged City and Other Poems (trans. John Carpenter and Bogdana Carpenter; New York: Eco Press, 1986): 45.

Hertz, Noreena 2001 The Silent Takeover: Global Capitalism and the Death of Democracy (London: Heinemann).

Klein, Naomi 2000 No Logo (London: Flamingo).

Kolakowski, Leszek 1990a ‘The Revenge of the Sacred in the Secular Culture’, in idem, Modernity on Endless Trial: 63.

b Modernity on Endless Trial (Chicago: University of Chicago Press).

Lyotard, Jean François 1993 Libidnal Economy (Bloomington: Indiana University Press).

Montaigne, Michel E. de 1958 Essays (trans. J.M. Cohen; Penguin Classics [repr. 1976]).

Mouffe, Chantal 2000 Deliberative Democracy and Agonistic Pluralism (Vienna: Institute for Advanced Studies, December).

Plescu, Andrei 2004 ‘Humanism for the Week’, Paper Presented at the Conference ‘Humanism for the 21st Century’, 3–5 June, Oslo.

Staniszkis, Jadwiga 1984 Poland’s Self-Limiting Revolution (ed. Jan T. Gross; Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press).

Subcommandante Marcos 2005 ‘Piaskowy zegar Zapatystow. Gabriela Garcia Marquez i Roberto Pombo rozmawaiaja z Subcommendante Marcosem’, Krytyka polityczna 7/8: 61.

White, Lynn 1967 ‘Historical Roots of Our Ecological Crisis’, Science 155: 1203-07.

Witoszek, Nina 1995 ‘Are We All Protestants Now? Paradoxes of Sustainable Culture’, in O. Langhelle et al. (eds.), Bærekraftig utvikling: om utviklingens mål og bærekraftens betingelser (Oslo: Universitetsforlaget): 279–93.

forthcoming ‘Moral Communities and Power: The East-Central European Renaissance 1975–1990’.

Virilio, Paul 2000 The Information Bomb (London: Verso).

Zizek, Slavoy 2005 ‘Zemsta swiatowych finansow’ (‘The Revenge of World Finance’), Europa 61, no. 22.

Published

2006-08-24

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

Witoszek, N. (2006). Globalization and Sustainability: A Humanist Agenda. Journal for the Study of Religion, Nature and Culture, 11(3), 268-281. https://doi.org/10.1558/ecot.2006.11.3.268

Most read articles by the same author(s)

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 > >>