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Cosmopolitanism and Global Citizenship

Cosmopolitanism imagines belonging to a single human community, and postcolonial thinkers have both embraced and reworked it from below.

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Definition

The study of cosmopolitan ideals of universal human belonging and global citizenship, and of their postcolonial critiques and reformulations.

Scope

This topic examines cosmopolitanism and global citizenship in a postcolonial frame: Appiah's ethics of obligation to strangers, critiques that link classical cosmopolitanism to Western universalism, and reformulations such as vernacular and rooted cosmopolitanism that ground global belonging in particular locations and histories.

Core questions

  • What obligations do we owe to those beyond our nation?
  • Is cosmopolitanism a Western universalism in disguise?
  • How can cosmopolitanism be grounded in particular places and histories?

Key theories

Rooted cosmopolitanism
Kwame Anthony Appiah defended a cosmopolitanism that combines universal moral concern for strangers with respect for particular attachments and differences.
Vernacular cosmopolitanism
Homi Bhabha proposed a 'vernacular cosmopolitanism' arising from the margins and minorities, reworking cosmopolitan ideals through located, postcolonial experience.

History

Debates over cosmopolitanism revived in the 1990s amid globalization, with postcolonial critics questioning its Enlightenment universalism. Works such as Cosmopolitics and Appiah's later synthesis recast cosmopolitanism as plural, located, and compatible with cultural difference.

Debates

Universalism versus rootedness
Scholars debate whether cosmopolitanism imposes a Western universal or can be reconciled with particular attachments, as rooted and vernacular versions propose.

Key figures

  • Kwame Anthony Appiah
  • Homi K. Bhabha
  • Bruce Robbins
  • Pheng Cheah

Related topics

Seminal works

  • appiah2006
  • cheahrobbins1998

Frequently asked questions

What is cosmopolitanism?
It is the idea that all human beings belong to a single moral community, with obligations that extend beyond one's own nation or group.

Methods for this concept

Related concepts