Abstract

Since the early 1970s we have wondered—with increasing anxiety—why and if we know better. Social scientists, literary critics, philosophers, and jurists have all begun to turn from their particular disciplines to the more general question of interpretation. There has been an increasing uneasiness with universal categories of thought; a whispered suspicion and then a commonly held belief that the sum—societies, histories, identities—never amounts to more than its parts. New analytical frameworks have begun to emerge, sensitive to both the pluralities and localities of life. "What we need," as Clifford Geertz argued, "are not enormous ideas" but "ways of thinking that are responsive to particularities, to individualities, oddities, discontinuities, contrasts, and singularities."

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