3 A Single World-Economy and Eurocentric Culture: The Integration of Ceylon into European Economic and Cultural Systems This chapter addresses two major themes: the incorporation of particular zones into the European world-economy, and the establishment of a world hegemony in which west European cultures were to hold the most prominent position. The spatial dimensions of these are examined, particularly as they relate to Ceylon. According to W allerstein, the incorporation of new zones into the European world-economy, usually as simple raw-material producers, has involved three major transformations: the creation of a new pattern of exports and imports, larger economic “enterprises� capable of responding to the ever changing market conditions of the world-economy, and a significant increase in the coercion of the labor force.1 The incorporation thus required the building of institutions and spaces in new zones which were compatible with those of the larger world-economy and the necessary links between these. Ceylon was incorporated into the worldeconomy through the introduction of an export-oriented cash-crop agriculture, principally coffee, destined for the British imperial market, a plantation system large enough to operate as a constituent element of the European world-economy, and the necessary communication and financial networks that converged in Colombo. Gayathri Chakravorty Spivak and Homi Bhabha have argued that west European imperialism was not only territorial and economic but also cultural, inevitably involved in the constitution of subjects. In addition to establishing political domination and economic command, the core European states also constructed a privileged position for the knowledge, cultural systems, and worldviews that they were simultaneously developing. European expansion thus involved a complex process in which the European powers were both developing a world and a body of knowledge about that world. Robert Young argues that European thought since the Renaissance would be inconceivable without the impact of colonialism just as the history of the world since the Renaissance would be inconceivable without the 61