Uploaded by Max Possek

Proposal

advertisement
Maxim Possek
214903645
February 4, 2019
Cultural Imperialism: A Fast-Food Perspective
The basic function behind food is to give people vitality and fuel them through their daily life.
Yet in all actuality, food has turned into a method for communication, bonding, articulation of
feelings, and expression of identity. A culture's food can be as vital to their way of life as their
dialect or even their physical attributes. With the fast speed at which globalization is moving
forward, it is unavoidable that new societies meet, start to change, and, in a sense, modernize.
The new age allows for more interactions with different communities outside their very own,
thus expanding people’s interest to attempt new things and experience these societies that are so
different from their own. Most notably, the experience is practiced through indulgence in cuisine
and foods of other global cultures. Multinational organizations in the food industry have taken
advantage of this opportunity to grow their business globally and connect with various kinds of
individuals throughout the world. Be that as it may, the globalization of fast food has caused
some discussion among people. Considering the way that the majority of these major
corporations are expanding all over the world and proceeding to grow are American. A large
number of the people who oppose globalization consider this to be a risk to their home culture
and identity, or in this particular case, their cuisine. There is a great deal of variables that go into
a fast food brand growing itself in a foreign nation, around its distinct culture. This calls for
localization with accord to the culture they are near while still keeping the taste in its original
form. Culture is continually changing and with globalization and the outreach of major
corporations into foreign cultures, instead of cultural homogenization, it is unquestionably bound
to result in individuals' feeling of cultural identity become stronger or potentially resulting in
cultures blending to result in hybridization, the two of which are extraordinary things and ought
to be grasped.
Globalization and Culture: Ideologies of Globalism
By: Manfred B. Steger and Paul James
To define imperialism, Steger and James refer to late 19th century imperialism as a “way of life”,
encompassed with “a deeply racialized civilizing mission and a beneficent colonizing spirit.” (p.
ix) In today’s world- the 21st century, the definition is quite different because “competing
ideologies of globalization articulate a tangled, but generalizing, global imaginary that, more
readily than ever before, cuts across class, gender, race, and state-based, geopolitical and cultural
differences, postcolonial divides and other social boundaries.” (p. ix) The global imaginary
includes and translates into differing political agendas by competing globalisms. Deriving from
market globalism, imperial globalism, according to the authors, essentially claims that “global
peace depends upon the global economic reach and military authority of an (informal) ‘American
Empire’ and its allies” (p. xiv)
The Construction of Consent
By: David Harvey
In chapter two of his book, Harvey argues that the only way for people to accept neoliberalism,
the theory has to appeal to common sense. Harvey explains starting in the 1970s people began to
see how neoliberalism “penetrated ‘common-sense’ understandings” (p. 41). Ultimately, many
parts of the world started to see neoliberalism as a “necessary, even wholly ‘natural’, way for the
social order to be regulated.” (p. 47) He goes on to further contend that neoliberalism was
centered around the theme of individual freedom and autonomy. Harvey also proposes an
alternative by which neoliberalism can supplant liberalism and that is with the use of power. He
an example of the utilization of military power in Chile and the utilization of monetary power by
the IMF in Mozambique.
Between McWorld and Jihad
By: Naomi Klein
Naomi Klein, a renown anti-neoliberalist, argues in this paper the symbolic importance of the
9/11 attacks. The twin towers were not just some buildings, instead they were “symbols of
American capitalism”. The battle of activist groups against capitalism such as Ontario Coalition
Against Poverty (OCAP) is not against a certain economic or political entity, but against a whole
economic system. So what does the modern activist do to counter such a vast ideology, that is
both nowhere and everywhere? The answer, according to Klein, is that the only way to do so is
to “grab anything you can get your hands on: the brand image of a famous multinational, a stock
exchange, a meeting of world leaders, a single trade agreement or, in the case of the Toronto
group, the banks and corporate headquarters that are the engines that power this agenda.
Anything that, even fleetingly, makes the intangible actual, the vastness somehow human-scale.”
Simply put, you must find a symbol and cling to it in the hopes it becomes a metaphor for change
in the future.
Cultural Imperialism: An American Tradition
By: Julia Galeota
In her paper, Galeota asserts that globalization and cultural imperialism has become directly
identified and associated with American culture, to the point where the term “American
tradition” has been coined. Galeota further argues that Americans have convinced themselves
that their culture is superior and other cultures would benefit by being Americanized to some
extent. Furthermore, American corporations have been successful in persuading people to idolize
American culture through marketing, “whether attempting to sell an item, a brand, or an entire
culture, marketers have always been able to successfully associate American products with
modernity in the minds of consumers worldwide” (p. 22). These corporations advertise the image
that America is “the land of the ‘cool’” (p. 22) which makes people from different cultures want
to associate with this image, thus purchasing their products and immersing themselves in their
culture, all potentially leading to abandoning at least some parts of their own cultural identity.
The Power of Identity
By: Manuel Castells
In this book, Castells uses the term “individuation” to define identities. He claims that they
influence people’s behavior which depends on interactions between individuals and the
institutions and organizations within the culture. He further argues that "Identities can also be
originated from dominant institutions, they become identities only when and if social actors
internalize them, and construct their meaning around this internalization." (p. 7). He then goes on
to identify three components of constructing identity, one of which he refers to as “resistance
identity.” It is the component of identity which, when faced with subjection by another culture,
forces people to acknowledge their own identity further and maintain a stronger grip on it.
People will then find comfort in their own culture and immerse themselves into it rather than
deviating to the imperialist culture that is threatening their own. This leads to the formation of
groups and communities built on a similar culture identity. Castells contends that this is the most
crucial type of identity formation because it is the most effective way to resist otherwise
threatening oppression.
Globalization as Hybridization
By: Jan Nederveen Pieterse
With regards to globalization as structural hybridization, Pieterse argues that “what globalization
means in structural terms, then, is the increase in the available modes of organization:
transnational, international, macro-regional, national, micro-regional, municipal, local. This
ladder of administrative levels is being crisscrossed by functional networks of corporations,
international organizations and non - governmental organizations, as well as by professionals and
computer uses. Part of this is what has been termed the ‘internationalization of the state’ as states
are ‘increasingly engaged in multilateral forms of international governance’” (p. 50), which is
tied to the concept of “post-international politics” that is the product of two interactive and
overlapping worlds: the state-centric world which includes the prominent actors are national, and
a multi-centric world which includes actors such as corporations, international groups and
religious organizations.
Glocommodification: How the Global Consumes the Local – McDonald’s in Israel
By: Uri Ram
Ram uses the term “McDonalidization” to argue how globalization can enhance a culture even
more, and this process of “Mcdonalidization” of certain cuisine played a role in keeping
traditional food alive, although it is not in the same “authentic” way as before. Ram provides an
example of Falafel, which is a standout amongst the most prevalent Israeli dishes known around
the world. It was prominent all through the greater part of the 1900s, then around the 1970s it
tumbled from its greatness. Around 2000 it made its rebound, around a similar time when
McDonald's added it to their Israeli menu. Although, they standardized the dish and included to
some degree an American curve to it be that as it, nonetheless, it was still customized to the
culture surrounding it. “Indeed, the global (McDonald’s) contributed somewhat to the revival of
the local (the falafel). In the process, however, the global also transformed the nature and
meaning of the local. The local, in turn, caused a slight modification in the taste and size of the
global, while leaving its basic institutional patterns and organizational practices intact. “(p. 13)
Globalization and Cultural Identity
By: John Tomlinson
Before the era of globalization, identity was something other than just a sense of cultural
belonging, it was viewed as a precious aspect of local communities. Individuals considered
identity to be something that was delicate and should have been secured no matter what.
“Globalization, so the story goes, has swept like a flood tide through the world’s diverse cultures,
destroying stable localities, displacing peoples, bringing a market-driven, ‘branded’
homogenization of cultural experience, thus obliterating the differences between locality-defined
cultures which had constituted our identities.” (p. 269) To the individuals who consider
American chains that set up shops internationally a danger to local cuisine and their way of life
need to recognize that the way that they have to localize themselves to succeed demonstrates that
individuals are not willing to surrender their customs and what they are utilized to do so
effectively.
Download