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The application of Critical Theory to European history—examining how Europe's past is constructed, how it serves European identity and power, and what's erased. Critical Theory of European History asks: How has European history been written to center Europe as the source of progress, civilization, modernity? What violence is hidden in that story—colonialism, slavery, genocide? How does European history serve contemporary European power? Drawing on postcolonial theory and critical historiography, it insists that European history is never just about Europe—it's about the world Europe shaped, and the stories Europe tells about itself.
"European history is the story of progress, they say. Critical Theory of European History asks: progress for whom? At whose expense? The Enlightenment happened alongside slavery; democracy expanded as colonies were exploited. European history that ignores that is propaganda, not history. Critical theory insists on telling the whole story—the violence alongside the progress."
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal March 4, 2026
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