Nowadays globalization tends to encompass not only the properly technological activities but all areas of human activity. Education, welfare, culture, environment, water, transport, telecommunications, energy and all public services are constrained into a system which is more and more economic, private, and competitive.
The cases of Asia and Africa are, in a way, more complex and subtle than those of the Western continents. While these areas are very often successfully developing new technologies and sometimes become important players in the global economy inside the process of capitalization, it is doubtful that they will change all their traditional values and customs to integrate Western influences in the dynamic of their societies. Does in fact modernity come only from the West? Is globalization the only way to “develop” in the postmodern condition? Agency and desire in late capitalism are extremely individualistic and, more often than not, motivated by selfish interests, whereas the experience of cultures in Asia and Africa suggests that communal welfare might supersede the objective of individual profit.
The multidisciplinary approach of this collection of articles, where some of the speakers are social scientists and others specialists of literature, explores the multi-faceted aspects of this very contemporary issue. The authors give us their personal reflections on the geographical and cultural areas under their scrutiny and their viewpoints, which oscillate from the detailed and descriptive to the analytical, theoretical and philosophical. They are mostly very critical, but they also underline the necessity to go largely beyond Ngugi wa Thiong’o’s concept of decolonizing the mind to cope with the recent challenges of the Global World.
CONTENTS:
PREFACE by Evelyne HANQUART-TURNER
Joana PASSOS: Schizophrenic conditions, difficult transitions
Lalita JAGTIANI-NAUMANN: Tradition and modernity – intertwining strands in Indian women’s consciousness
Lorenza CORAY-DAPRETTO: Dalits and untouchability in connection with the contemporary Indian bourgeois revolution
Borislava SASIC: Engaging/challenging the notion development
Lay TSHIALA: Owning a house back home – Western individualism or sense of community among Congolese immigrants living abroad?
Beena ANAND: Tradition and modernity in Indian mainstream and diasporic cinema today
Sujay SOOD: Modo-culture and the vitalizing complex – Bollywood films and globalization
Michel NAUMANN: From Achebe’s Chi in Igbo cosmology to Chi in globalization
THE AUTHORS
Under these links you will find further publications on linguistic and cultural globalization and future research in Africa:
Ce volume d’articles présente une unité de contenu en ce qu’il propose d’analyser la dichotomie entre tradition et modernité, surtout dans le monde littéraire et cinématographique.
Karen Ferreira-Meyers in Études Littéraires Africaines, 27/2009, X
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