Recurring Dark Ages: Difference between revisions

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(https://www.researchgate.net/publication/290825859_Review_of_the_recurring_dark_ages_Ecological_stress_climate_changes_and_system_transformation)
(https://www.researchgate.net/publication/290825859_Review_of_the_recurring_dark_ages_Ecological_stress_climate_changes_and_system_transformation)


[[Category:Books]]
 
=Excerpts=
 
==From the Preface==
 
Sing Chew:
 
"The reader will find in this book, the second of a three-volume series,
my continuing journey '''to understand the structural conditions and processes that determine the relationship between Nature and Culture'''.
 
In particular, I am focusing on a specific conjuncture in world history
known as the Dark Ages to elucidate further the structural processes of
the Nature-Culture relations, and the structural transformation of the
world system.
 
In the first volume, [[World Ecological Degradation]], I indicated that '''Dark Ages were critical phases in system reproduction''', and that a comparative understanding of them was necessary to understand the evolution of the world system.
 
Particularly in this book, I wish to clarify further the
Nature-Culture relations via an examination of the Dark Ages in order
to have a clearer understanding of system crisis and system transformations from an ecological world system history perspective-an approach I proposed some ten years ago (Chew 1997b).
 
This attempt on my part to scrutinize the issue of system crisis and transformation is to propose that
perhaps it is '''"ecology in command" that might be the key that will offer a more robust explanation of system crisis and transformation than what has been attempted to date as the "economy in command" approach in world-systems analysis''' (Chew 2002b).
 
In an era of global environmental
crisis, I hope that my approach will become more convincing as the crisis
deepens, and that we will shift our way of thinking and analysis so that we
can have a clearer view of what has occurred and what will happen.
 
To delve further into an understanding of system transformation,
I propose in this book to consider Dark Ages in world history not only as
a historical period for study, but also as a historical-theoretical concept to
understand the historical moments of social system crisis and transition.
By doing this in a historical-comparative manner over time-space boundaries, I believe, we can have a better grasp of system crisis and transition.
 
This effort on my part is to try to convince the reader that we need to
consider that theory is history, and that history is theory. In this sense, a comparative-historical examination of the Dark Ages over world history and our understanding of these phases are informed by our ecological world
system history perspective, and pari passu, our analysis of the historical
events and processes of Dark Ages informs and modifies our theoretical
view of Dark Ages over world history.
 
Given the above, my investigation of Dark Ages over world history
has convinced me, and hopefully the reader, that '''these periods are significant moments in human world history, for they are transitional phases of system transformation'''. It is my belief that Dark Ages (as
historical events and as a theoretical concept) are critical crisis periods
in world history over the course of the last five thousand years when
environmental conditions have played a significant part in determining
how societies, kingdoms, empires, and civilizations are reorganized and
organized. Therefore, Dark Ages are significant moments for human his-
tory. They are periods of devolution of human communities, and as such
from the perspective of human progress, a period of socioeconomic and
political decay and retrogression. However, Dark Ages are periods of the
restoration of the landscape, which are a consequence of the slowdown
of human activities. In short, Dark Ages rejuvenate Nature but are bad
for Humans.
 
To view it in such light would be in my view limiting by pitting
one position against the other. Dark Ages, if we examine the historical events, conditions, and circumstances, are also historical phases of innovations, learning, and reorganizations. Being so, they are periods
whereby the human communities that are impacted by these Dark Age
conditions are forced by circumstances, and not perhaps by choice, to
reorganize in a different manner to meet the contingencies of ecological scarcity and climate changes. It is my belief that this forms the basis for system transformation and the evolution of the world system.
 
This theme of system transition is discussed briefly in the concluding
chapter of this book. I have reserved the full treatment of this theme,
which I have termed ecological flltl/res, for the final volume of this three-
volume study of world ecological degradation over five thousand years
of world history."
 
(https://pdfroom.com/books/the-recurring-dark-ages-ecological-stress-climate-changes-and-system-transformation/KkM5rWYDdE3)


[[Category:Civilizational_Analysis]]
[[Category:Civilizational_Analysis]]

Revision as of 12:24, 3 April 2024

* Book: The Recurring Dark Ages. Ecological Stress, Climate Changes, and System Transformation. By SING C. CHEW. Rowman and Littlefield, 2006

URL = https://rowman.com/ISBN/9780759104525/The-Recurring-Dark-Ages-Ecological-Stress-Climate-Changes-and-System-Transformation; https://www.nhbs.com/the-recurring-dark-ages-book pdf


Description

"In this modern era of global environmental crisis, Sing Chew provides a convincing analysis of the recurring human and environmental crises identified as Dark Ages. In this, his second of a three-volume series concerning world ecological degradation, Chew reviews the past 5,000-year history of structural conditions and processes that define the relationship between nature and culture. Chew's message about the coming Dark Ages, as human communities continue to reorganize to meet the contingencies of ecological scarcity and climate changes, is a must-read for those concerned with human interactions and environmental changes, including environmental anthropologists and historians, world historians, geographers, archaeologists, and environmental scientists."


Review

Mats Widgren:

"In this book, which is a follow up of the authorʼs World Ecological Degradation, Sing Chew sets out to add an ecological dimension to previous studies of world systems and more specifically to study the role of ecology in explaining Dark Ages – periods of social, economic and demographic decline. The thesis is that ʻDark Ages occur as a consequence of ecological exhaustion and stress and exhibit losses in wealth, trade disruptions, and simplification of lifestyles and less hierarchization and more egalitarianism of the social structureʼ (p. 160). This argument, of a connection, or even a causative relation between over-utilisation of natural resources and social crisis is not new. New is perhaps the attempt to analyse Dark Ages through time, from the Bronze Age to the fall of the Roman Empire, and to put this in the context of the present global situation. Given the vast and fast growing body of literature on environmental history, based on scientific methods in archaeology, palaeoecology and palaeoclimatology, there is scope today for such a work aimed at a broad synthesis. Chewʼs material for the analysis of the ecological component in world systems history is a rather small selection of secondary literature, together with data from 40 pollen diagrams. These cover an area from Greenland in the northwest to Turkey in the southeast and a number of European countries in between. It is an innovative approach to make use of such a data set in order to illuminate the relations between economic/social expansion and regression, and the use of natural resources. Pollen diagrams do give a comparatively standardised picture of changes in the composition of vegetation. Moreover, for the periods and for most of the areas that Chew focuses on, human influence plays a central role in these changes. That type of data therefore represents an interesting contrast to what can be gathered from scant historical and archaeological sources for the same periods.

(https://www.researchgate.net/publication/290825859_Review_of_the_recurring_dark_ages_Ecological_stress_climate_changes_and_system_transformation)


Excerpts

From the Preface

Sing Chew:

"The reader will find in this book, the second of a three-volume series, my continuing journey to understand the structural conditions and processes that determine the relationship between Nature and Culture.

In particular, I am focusing on a specific conjuncture in world history known as the Dark Ages to elucidate further the structural processes of the Nature-Culture relations, and the structural transformation of the world system.

In the first volume, World Ecological Degradation, I indicated that Dark Ages were critical phases in system reproduction, and that a comparative understanding of them was necessary to understand the evolution of the world system.

Particularly in this book, I wish to clarify further the Nature-Culture relations via an examination of the Dark Ages in order to have a clearer understanding of system crisis and system transformations from an ecological world system history perspective-an approach I proposed some ten years ago (Chew 1997b).

This attempt on my part to scrutinize the issue of system crisis and transformation is to propose that perhaps it is "ecology in command" that might be the key that will offer a more robust explanation of system crisis and transformation than what has been attempted to date as the "economy in command" approach in world-systems analysis (Chew 2002b).

In an era of global environmental crisis, I hope that my approach will become more convincing as the crisis deepens, and that we will shift our way of thinking and analysis so that we can have a clearer view of what has occurred and what will happen.

To delve further into an understanding of system transformation, I propose in this book to consider Dark Ages in world history not only as a historical period for study, but also as a historical-theoretical concept to understand the historical moments of social system crisis and transition. By doing this in a historical-comparative manner over time-space boundaries, I believe, we can have a better grasp of system crisis and transition.

This effort on my part is to try to convince the reader that we need to consider that theory is history, and that history is theory. In this sense, a comparative-historical examination of the Dark Ages over world history and our understanding of these phases are informed by our ecological world system history perspective, and pari passu, our analysis of the historical events and processes of Dark Ages informs and modifies our theoretical view of Dark Ages over world history.

Given the above, my investigation of Dark Ages over world history has convinced me, and hopefully the reader, that these periods are significant moments in human world history, for they are transitional phases of system transformation. It is my belief that Dark Ages (as historical events and as a theoretical concept) are critical crisis periods in world history over the course of the last five thousand years when environmental conditions have played a significant part in determining how societies, kingdoms, empires, and civilizations are reorganized and organized. Therefore, Dark Ages are significant moments for human his- tory. They are periods of devolution of human communities, and as such from the perspective of human progress, a period of socioeconomic and political decay and retrogression. However, Dark Ages are periods of the restoration of the landscape, which are a consequence of the slowdown of human activities. In short, Dark Ages rejuvenate Nature but are bad for Humans.

To view it in such light would be in my view limiting by pitting one position against the other. Dark Ages, if we examine the historical events, conditions, and circumstances, are also historical phases of innovations, learning, and reorganizations. Being so, they are periods whereby the human communities that are impacted by these Dark Age conditions are forced by circumstances, and not perhaps by choice, to reorganize in a different manner to meet the contingencies of ecological scarcity and climate changes. It is my belief that this forms the basis for system transformation and the evolution of the world system.

This theme of system transition is discussed briefly in the concluding chapter of this book. I have reserved the full treatment of this theme, which I have termed ecological flltl/res, for the final volume of this three- volume study of world ecological degradation over five thousand years of world history."

(https://pdfroom.com/books/the-recurring-dark-ages-ecological-stress-climate-changes-and-system-transformation/KkM5rWYDdE3)