Ricardo Duchesne

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Ricardo Duchesne
Nationality Canadian
Fields Historical sociologist
Institutions University of New Brunswick
Alma mater York University

Ricardo Duchesne is a Canadian historical sociologist and former professor at the University of New Brunswick. His main research interests are Western civilization and the rise of the West. In his 2011 work The Uniqueness of Western Civilization he criticises what he sees as the destructive effects of multiculturalism on Western culture.

Career overview

Born in Puerto Rico, Duchesne studied History at McGill University and later at Concordia University, under the supervision of George Rudé. In 1994 he received a doctorate in Social & Political Thought at York University. His Dissertation, "All Contraries Confounded: Historical Materialism and the Transition-to-Capitalism Debate",[1] was awarded the "Doctoral Prize Award" for best dissertation of the year.[2] In 1995, Duchesne was appointed assistant professor in the department of social science at the University of New Brunswick.

In May 2019, The University of New Brunswick announced that it would review complaints related to Duchesne's public comments and views. A group of over 100 of Duchesne's colleagues at the University of New Brunswick signed an open letter condemning his views as "racist and without academic merit." The Canadian Historical Association also wrote a letter denouncing Duchesne's work.[3][4] In response, Duchesne stated signatories did not have "any scholarly background" in immigration or multiculturalism, and said that the charge of racism "has been overused beyond reason...and is used against anyone who questions this diversity".[5][6] Mark Mercer, president of the Society for Academic Freedom and Scholarship questioned the school's decision to review Duchesne, and argued that Duchesne's work was protected by academic freedom.[3]

He took an early retirement from his position in June of 2019.[7]

Ideas

In his main work, The Uniqueness of Western Civilization,[8][9][10] Duchesne denounces the devaluation of Western culture by a revisionist multicultural ideology which has been sweeping the academic world since the 1960s,[11] arguing for the continued validity of the traditional view of Europe as the one culture that produced the modern world, but adding that Europe has always been the most creative civilization since the Greek discovery of reason, prose writing, tragedy, comedy, dialectical reasoning, theoretical science, citizenship and democratic politics.[12][13] Duchesne challenges World historians in their claim that there were surprising economic similarities between Europe and Asia as late as 1800.[14] He questions the way in which the debate about the 'rise of the West' has been conceptualized merely in terms of the onset of the modern world, the Scientific Revolution, the creation of a world capitalist economy, and the changes brought about in Europe during the Industrial Revolution. Duchesne maintains throughout the book four main theses:

  • In the last few decades, the writing of world history has been driven by academics determined to portray the achievements of civilizations in terms that support the egalitarian idea that all cultures are similar, producing a shoddy historiography and social science that have devalued the intrinsic quality of Western civilization and seriously underestimated its accomplishments between ancient times and the present day.[15]
  • At least since classical antiquity, the culture of the West has always been “in a state of variance from the world”.[16]
  • In cultivating a virtually unparalleled democratic culture, with the Greek and Roman assemblies, parliaments and municipal communes, universities, reading societies, intellectual salons and newspapers, the West made possible the rise of modernity.
  • He identifies the roots of the West’s restless creativity in the unique aristocratic culture of Indo-Europeans,[17] with its ethos of heroic individualism and competitive spirit.[18][19]

Duchesne has conducted criticisms of the writings of such World historians as Kenneth Pomeranz, Patrick O'Brien,[20] Bing Wong, Andre Gunder Frank, John Hobson, and Sebastian Conrad,[21] as well as Ian Morris,[22] accusing them of systematically downsizing Western history and civilization achievements.

Duchesne is a vehement critic of immigrant multiculturalism[23][24][25] and political correctness in academe.[26] Since the publication of his 2011 book, Duchesne has been arguing that the multicultural interpretation of the West is part of a wider effort by established elites to create heterogeneous race-mixed societies inside all European-created nations through the promotion of mass immigration. Duchesne also criticizes mainstream conservatives for advancing the idea that Western political identity is based only on universal liberal democratic values that are true for all human beings. He argues that liberalism is uniquely Western and that Western identity is also deeply connected to the ethnic character of Europeans.[20][21][27] He has criticized Isaiah Berlin, among others, for promoting the idea that Johann Gottfried Herder was the original advocate of multiculturalism and racial diversity inside Western nations, arguing instead that Herder was a promoter of the value of distinctive nationalities in the world peacefully co-existing alongside each other in a multicultural world order.[28]

In mid-2014, Duchesne created the blog "Council of European Canadians", which is dedicated to the promotion and defense of the ethnic interests of European Canadians.[29]

More recently, Duchesne has been working on the Greek-Roman origins of Western civic identity, while questioning the established claim that this uniquely Western idea of civic identity precludes an ethnic identity, a sense of territorial place, racial identity, and ancestry.[30] In his 2017 book, Canada in Decay: Mass Immigration, Diversity, and the Ethnocide of Euro-Canadians, he argues that Canada is not a "nation of immigrants" but a nation created by Anglo and French pioneers and settlers. The book also questions what Duchesne argues are double standards of multiculturalism in granting both collective ethnic rights and individual rights to minorities and immigrant groups while, in his view, suppressing the ethno-cultural rights of Canadians of European descent.[31]

Works

Major works

  • The Uniqueness of Western Civilization. Leiden and Boston: Brill, 2011, ISBN 978-90-04-19248-5
  • Faustian Man in a Multicultural Age. London: Arktos, 2017.
  • Canada in Decay: Mass Immigration, Diversity, and the Ethnocide of Euro-Canadians. London: Black House Publishing, 2017.

Selected publications

  • "The French Revolution as a Bourgeois Revolution: A Critique of the Revisionists", Science & Society, Vol. 54, No. 3, 1990, pp. 288–320
  • "Between Sinocentrism and Eurocentrism: Debating A.G. Frank's Re-Orient", Science & Society, Vol. 65, No. 4, 2001/2002, pp. 428–463
  • "Rodney Hilton's Peasant Road to Capitalism?", Journal of Peasant Studies, Vol. 30, No. 2, 2003, pp. 129–145
  • "Centres and Margins: The Fall of Universal History and the Rise of Multicultural World History", in Hughes-Warrington, Marnie (ed.), Advances in World Histories, London and New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2004, pp. 135–167, ISBN 1-4039-1278-5
  • "On the Rise of the West: Researching Kenneth Pomeranz's Great Divergence", Review of Radical Political Economics, Vol. 36, No. 1, 2004, pp. 52–81
  • "Defending the Rise of Western Culture Against its Multicultural Critics", The European Legacy, Vol. 10, No. 5, 2005, pp. 455–484
  • "Globalization, the Industrialization of Puerto Rico and the Limits of Dependency Theory", Journal für Entwicklungspolitik, Vol. 32, No. 1, 2006, pp. 55–83
  • "Asia First?", The Journal of the Historical Society, Vol. 6, No. 1, 2006, pp. 69–91
  • "Christianity is a Hellenistic Religion, and Western Civilization is Christian", Historically Speaking, Vol. 7, No. 4, 2006
  • "The Way of Africa, the Way I Am, and the Hermeneutic Circle", in Yerxa, Donald (ed.), Recent Trends in World History: The Place of Africa and the Atlantic World: Historians in Conversation, Columbia, South Carolina: The University of South Carolina Press, 2008, ISBN 978-1-57003-758-0
  • "The World Without Us", Academic Questions, Vol. 22, No. 2, 2009, pp. 138–176
  • "A Civilization of Explorers", Academic Questions, Vol. 25, No. 1, 2012, pp. 65–93
  • "Hegel and the Western Spirit", Comparative Civilizations Review, Vol. 67, 2012, pp. 63–74
  • "The Straussian Assault on America's European Heritage," The Occidental Quarterly, Vol. 14, No. 3, 2014.
  • "Oswald Spengler and the Faustian Soul of the West," The Occidental Quarterly, Vol. 14, No. 4, 2014/2015.
  • "The Greek-Roman Invention of Civic Identity Versus the Current Demotion of European Identity," The Occidental Quarterly, Vol. 15, No. 3, 2015.
  • "European Culture; The Greatest Civilising Force in History," The Salisbury Review, August 2016.
  • "Steven Pinker's Anti-Enlightenment Attack on White Identitarians," The Occidental Quarterly, Vol. 18, No. 2, 2018.

See also

References

  1. Duchesne, Ricardo (1994). "All Contraries Confounded: Historical Materialism and the Transition-to-Capitalism Debate". Ph.D. diss., York University, Toronto.
  2. "Dr. Ricardo Duchesne", University of New Brunswick.
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  8. Jones, Eric (2011). "The Uniqueness of Western Civilization," Policy 27 (4), pp. 61–63.
  9. Balch, Stephen H. (2011). "Nowhere but the West," Academic Questions 24 (4), pp. 469-479.
  10. MacDonald, Kevin (2011). "Going Against the Tide: Ricardo Duchesne's Intellectual Defense of the West," The Occidental Quarterly, Vol. 11, No. 3, pp. 47–74.
  11. Hewson, Martin (2012). "Multicultural vs. Post-Multicultural World History: A Review Essay," Cliodynamics 3 (2), p. 310.
  12. Znamenski, Andrei (2012). "The 'European Miracle': Warrior Aristocrats, Spirit of Liberty, and Competition as a Discovery Process," The Independent Review 16 (4), pp. pp. 599–610.
  13. Northrup, David (2012). "The Uniqueness of Western Civilization by Ricardo Duchesne," Journal of World History 23 (4), pp. 950–953.
  14. Duchesne, Ricardo (2011). The Uniqueness of Western Civilization. Leiden and Boston: Brill, p. ix.
  15. Duchesne, Ricardo (2011). "Reply to Mark Elvin," Canadian Journal of Sociology 36 (4), pp. 378–387.
  16. Duchesne, Ricardo (2013). "The Uniqueness of the West Reinforced: A Reply to Beckwith, Goldstone, and Turchin," Cliodynamics 4 (1), pp. 86–101.
  17. Havers, Grant (2013). "The Uniqueness of Western Civilization," The European Legacy: Toward New Paradigms, Vol. 18, Issue 5, p. 659.
  18. Duchesne (2011), pp. 383–387.
  19. Duchesne, Ricardo (2013). "Indo-Europeans Were the Most Historically Significant Nomads of the Steppes," Cliodynamics 4 (1), pp. 30–43.
  20. 20.0 20.1 Duchesne, Ricardo (2013). "Multicultural Historians: The Assault on Western Civilization and Defilement of the Historical Profession, Part I: Patrick O'Brien on the Scientific Revolution," The Occidental Quarterly 13 (3).
  21. 21.0 21.1 Duchesne, Ricardo (2013-14). "Multicultural Historians: The Assault on Western Civilization and Defilement of the Historical Profession, Part II: The Scientific Revolution and the Enlightenment," The Occidental Quarterly 13 (4).
  22. Duchesne, Ricardo (2011): "Review of Why The West Rules – For Now: The Patterns of History and What they Reveal about the Future," Reviews in History
  23. Duchesne, Ricardo (2005). "Defending the Rise of Western Culture Against its Multicultural Critics," The European Legacy: Toward New Paradigms 10 (5), pp. 455-484.
  24. Duchesne, Ricardo (2012). "Multicultural Madness," The Salisbury Review 31 (1), pp. 16–19.
  25. Duchesne, Ricardo (2014). "Will Kymlicka and the Disappearing Dominion," The Quarterly Review
  26. Northrup, David (2012). "The Uniqueness of Western Civilization by Ricardo Duchesne," Journal of World History 23 (4), p. 950.
  27. Duchesne, Ricardo (2012): "Review of Civilization: The Six Ways the West Beat the Rest," Reviews in History
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  29. The Council of Euro-Canadians, retrieved 3 July 2014.
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Further reading

  • Groves, J. Randall (2012). "Rationalization, Dialectic and the West: An Appraisal of Ricardo Duchesne's Uniqueness of Western Civilization". In: The Coming Clash of Civilization: China versus the West? Proceedings of the 42nd Conference of the International Society for the Comparative Study of Civilizations. (Washington, D.C.): 165-177.

External links