This special issue aims at tracing new ways of critically engaging with Eurocentrism as a polarizing, plural entity (1) by appraising where in relation to Eurocentrism(s) we stand at this point in the twenty-first century and (2) by identifying the possible trajectories away from it in our ways of viewing the world at large and as we do research.
Introduction
Done with Eurocentrism? Unpacking a plural construct Mahshid Mayar, Yaatsil Guevara González
Articles
Eurocentrism, Islam, and the intellectual politics of civilizational framing Shahzad Bashir
Knowledge about the ›Orient‹ between voice and scripture - Michel de Certeau and the Royal Danish Expedition to Arabia Felix (1761–1767) Mirjam Hähnle
Petrified worldviews. The Eurocentric legacy in architectural knowledge bases on Japan Beate Löffler
Feminism Otherwise. Intersectionality beyond Occidentalism Julia Roth
Persistence of Eurocentric orders and divisions. Reflections on »postcolonial scholarship« and the disentanglement of »race« and »religion« Luis Manuel Hernandez Aguilar, Ahmad Zubair
Beyond bipolarity? The rise and fall of the Argentine Third Position (1947–1950) Mirko Petersen
Re-mapping Europe. Field notes from the French-Brazilian borderland Fabio Santos