Examining the concept of TimeSpace in the work of Immanuel Wallerstein and its crucial role within world-systems analysis, Uncertainties of Time brings together important but previously hard-to-access material from Wallerstein’s writings.
Examining the concept of TimeSpace in the work of Immanuel Wallerstein and its crucial role within world-systems analysis, Uncertainties of Time brings together important but previously hard-to-access material from Wallerstein’s writings.
TimeSpace is a concept developed from Wallerstein’s earliest days in the 1970s until well-into the twenty-first century, drawing from the historian Fernand Braudel and the chemist Ilya Prigogine, to rethink historical time’s two overlooked modes—long enduring or eternal time, on the one hand, and, on the other, uncertainty in world-systems. He, thereby, invented a fresh innovation of historical social sciences that brought together economics, politics, and sociology.
This book is an essential volume for understanding Wallerstein’s unique contributions to the understanding of the Modern World-System, which he argued came to an end after the world revolution of 1968—leaving us now in an indeterminate world of chaos. This book is thereby invaluable as a resource for researchers and students who care about the history and decline of our chaotic world.
Arvustused
This book gets to the core of not only social theory, but the foundations of any historical social science. How we theorize and conceptualize time is foundational for any understanding of the social world, and this is a seminal text that wrestles with the final statement of such an important and eminent scholar.
Kristin Plys, Associate Professor of Sociology and History, University of Toronto
Wallersteins work continues to generate significant interest, yet his conception of TimeSpace remains an overlooked dimension of his thought. This book offers a valuable guide not only to Wallersteins broader intellectual contributions but also to the pivotal role this concept played in the evolution of World-Systems Analysis and his vision for the social sciences.
Sam Han, Lecturer in Sociology, University of Bristol
1. Immanuel Wallersteins Time-Space and the Withering of World
Structures (2026), Charles Lemert; Part I: Time and Global Spaces;
2.
SpaceTime as the Basis of Knowledge (1998), Immanuel Wallerstein;
3. The
Inventions of TimeSpace Realities: Towards an Understanding of Our Historical
Systems (1988), Immanuel Wallerstein;
4. The Time of Space and the Space of
Time: The Future of Social Science (1998), Immanuel Wallerstein; Part II: New
Geopolitical Realities: 19461968;
5. On Progress and Transitions, Immanuel
Wallerstein;
6. Social Change? Change is Eternal, Nothing Ever Changes
(1999), Immanuel Wallerstein;
7. Time and Duration: The Unexcluded Middle or
Reflections on Braudel and Prigogine (1998), Immanuel Wallerstein; Part III:
The Unraveling of the Modern World-System: 19681989;
8. 1968, Revolution in
the World-System (1989), Immanuel Wallerstein;
9. America and the World:
Today, Yesterday, and Tomorrow (1992), Immanuel Wallerstein;
10. 1989, The
Continuation of 1968 (1992), Giovanni Arrighi, Terence K. Hopkins, and
Immanuel Wallerstein; Part IV: TimeSpace and Future Social Sciences: After
1998;
11. The Rise and Future Demise of the Capitalist System: Concepts for
Comparative Analysis (1974), Immanuel Wallerstein;
12. The Imminent End of
Capitalism and Unifying Social Sciences (2008), Immanuel Wallerstein;
13.
Historical Origins of World-Systems Analysis: From Social Science Disciplines
to Historical Social Sciences (2004), Immanuel Wallerstein; Part V:
Conclusion: What Future?;
14. The Dilemmas of Open Space: The Future of the
World Social Forum (2004), Immanuel Wallerstein;
15. Precipitate Decline: The
Advent of Multipolarity (2007), Immanuel Wallerstein;
16. The Global
Possibilities, 19902025 (1996), Immanuel Wallerstein;
17. Wither the
TimeSpace of Politics? (2026), Charles Lemert
Immanuel Wallerstein was Senior Research Fellow in Sociology at Yale from 2000 until his death in 2019. From 1976 to 1999, he was Distinguished Professor of Sociology at Binghamton University (SUNY), where he founded and directed the Fernand Braudel Center for the Study of Economies, Historical Systems, and Civilizations. Wallerstein was recognized for his brilliance the world over. His many books and countless articles have been translated into dozens of languages. Of them, his world-renowned four-volume history of The Modern World-System is a masterful examination of the Western world from 1500 to the modern era. He is now and will be for time to come considered by many to be the most influential social scientist of his era.
Charles Lemert is University Professor Emeritus at Wesleyan University, USA. He has written extensively on social theory, globalization, and culture. Among more than 50 books, he is the author of Muhammad Ali: Trickster in the Culture of Irony (2003), Postmodernism Is Not What You Think (2005), and Globalization: An Introduction to the End of the Known World (2015) and the editor of Social Theory: The Multicultural, Global, and Classic Readings (2021). His recent books include Americans Thinking America and Silence and Society (both 2025).