Can The Vlachs Write Their Own History
Can The Vlachs Write Their Own History
Can The Vlachs Write Their Own History
9
that other cultures deserve some credit, too. 'While the particular
excellence of Western society may very well be the system of
rational inquiry that has led to, for example, advanced, successful
economies and systems of government, the particular excellence
of non-Western societies, which often demonstrate a limited ability
to harm the natural environment and a 'healthy respect for things
spiritual, is that they have not led to such Western ills as massive
environmental pollution and the possibility of nuclear annihila-
tion. Cultures can learn "excellences" from one another; the one
thing that we now feel we must avoid—and we are indeed in-
debted to the West for this particular bit of wisdom—is that
any culture think itself so superior as to seek to dominate the
others, putting an end to what diversity still remains after a
half-millennium of Western hegemony.
Another critique of the traditional/modern distinction sees
it as a typical dichotomous division of reality between an idealized
past and a less-than-ideal present. 4 Yet the human tendency to
idealize the past does not by itself negate the value of distin-
guishing two different types of society. And criticisms of moder-
nization theory as simplistic and dichotomous can best be an-
swered by noting that the theory does not necessarily postulate
that there are only two types of human society, "traditional" and
"modern"; rather, it simply seeks to describe a transition from
one type to another without excluding the possibility of, say, a
third type (such as a pre-Neolithic hunting and gathering society,
for example).
Thus while some of the earlier views of modernization are
discredited, the concept remains; modernization is seen not as an
absolute series of stages through which a given society must pass,
nor even as "good" or "bad," but rather as "a tendency or set of
tendencies," as the historian John Gillis puts it. Gillis goes on
to explain,
{T]radition and modernity are not two completely
different conditions. Elements of modernity—for ex-
ample, the recognition of merit over birth—existed
to some degree in preindustrial society. By the same
token, the traditional factor of advantage from birth
is still powerful in most modern societies, despite every
NOTES
1 As Ferdinand TOnnies's "community" versus "society," described in
Gemeinschaft and Gesellschaft, trans. Charles P. Loomis (London: Routledge &
Kegan Paul Ltd., 1955); Emile Durkheim's "organic" versus "mechanical" soli-
darity, The Division of Labor in Society, trans. George Simpson (New York:
The Free Press, 1964); Robert Park's "primary" versus "secondary" relations, in
his introduction to Max Weber's The City, translated and edited by Don
Martindale and Gertrud Neuwirth (Glencoe, IL: The Free Press, 1958).
2 As W. W. Rostow, The Stages of Economic Growth: A Non-Communist
Manifesto (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1961), A contemporary
version of this Western theology is the recent essay "The End of History" by
Francis Fukuyama in The National Interest 16 (Summer 1989).
8This argument is used by Allan Bloom in The Closing of the American
Mind (New York: Simon and Schuster, 1987).
4A detailed and useful criticism of modernization theory that cites this
argument is Dean C. Tipps, "Modernization Theory and the Comparative Study
of Societies: A Critical Perspective," Comparative Studies in Society and History
15 (1973), 199-226. See especially p. 207.
5John R. Gillis, The Development of European Society, 1770-1870 (Lanham,
MI): University Press of America, 1983), p. xv.
8 lmmanuel Wallerstein, "The Inequalities of Core and Periphery," in The
Capitalist World-Economy: Essays (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1979),
pp. 1-36. "The development of underdevelopment" is the theory of Andra
Gunder Frank; see the article of the same name in Monthly Review 18 (1966),
pp. 17-31.
?Eric R. Wolf, Europe and the People without History (Berkeley: University
of California Press, 1982), pp. 11-13.
8 Gillis, pp. xi-xii; S. N. Eisenstadt, Tradition, Change, and Modernity
(New York: John Wiley & Sons, 1973), pp. 23-25.
8 Mircea Eliade, Cosmos and History: The Myth of the Eternal Return,
trans. Willard R. Trask (New York: Harper and Row, 1959), p. 112. See also
Xxgoac atirilc, fa' Ex800ri ('A61Iva, 1986), and in French translation (by
a. 158.
58Balkan Studies 21:1 (1980), pp. 97-105. Lazarou's book was first published
in 1976.
52Unsigned article "Straausilli" (The Ancestors), in Barba and Barba, Latina,
p. 46.
53Who were at the least rather thoroughly Hellenized by the Roman period,
and at most a Greek tribe; for the latter view, see, for example, J. R. Hamilton,
Alexander the Great (Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press, 1982), p. 23.
There is a vast literature on this subject.
59 "Straausilli," in Barba and Barba, Latina, pp. 50-52.
80 "Straausilli," in Barba and Barba, Latina, p. 54.
51Many—if not most—of those active in ULCA were educated in Romania.