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Les enjeux de la mondialisation culturelle

Author

Listed:
  • Jean Tardif
  • Joëlle Farchy

    (CES - Centre d'économie de la Sorbonne - UP1 - Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne - CNRS - Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique)

Abstract

Most people know that globalization has dramatically lowered economic borders, relocated production, forced major policy changes, promoted Far Eastern growth, created new inequalities, challenged security arrangements and begun shifting power balances. In all this, however, we don't bother much with culture even though globalization is promoting cultural changes that could be hugely significant. Cultures are simultaneously constitutive of individual social behaviors and essential to human social existence. Globalization brings a new symbolic ecosystem, a "globalizing hyper-culture" spreading symbols in new ways at fantastic speeds, that creates a virtual "sixth continent" separate from tangible geography. This new culture tends to be a-historical, a-moral, and resocializing, constituting a new, virtual geo-cultural area. There should be concern about the potential for disorientation and loss faced by existing cultures and their members plus more general threats to cultural diversity, whether disaster is implied or not. Such threats no longer come primarily from proselytizing, colonization, conquest by powerful states, and hostile legal impositions, but rather from a free, painless, often seductive, circulation of symbols that can shift and undermine cultures, disrupt identities, and marginalize languages without anyone's consent and sometimes without anyone really noticing. With reference to cultural globalization and probably well beyond it, traditional state actors and international organizations are ineffective agents of global governance and unlikely to supply the controlled cultural globalization that is needed. Cultural globalization completely overwhelms existing national boundaries, state legal authorities, and the scope of international organizations. It calls for experiments with new forms of global governance involving new instances of concertation, beginning with existing geo-cultural entities such as Francophonie, Europe of Cultures, and IbéroAmerica).

Suggested Citation

  • Jean Tardif & Joëlle Farchy, 2006. "Les enjeux de la mondialisation culturelle," Post-Print hal-00272738, HAL.
  • Handle: RePEc:hal:journl:hal-00272738
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    Citations

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    Cited by:

    1. Brie, Mircea & Polgar, Istvan & Chirodea, Florentina, 2012. "Cultural Identity, Diversity and European Integration. Introductory Study," MPRA Paper 44067, University Library of Munich, Germany, revised 2012.
    2. Horga, Ioan & Brie, Mircea, 2010. "Europe: A Cultural Border, or a Geo-cultural Archipelago," MPRA Paper 44120, University Library of Munich, Germany, revised 1010.
    3. Stoica, Alina & Brie, Mircea, 2010. "The cultural Frontiers of Europe. Introductory Study," MPRA Paper 44119, University Library of Munich, Germany, revised 2010.
    4. Brie, Mircea, 2010. "European Culture between Diversity and Unity," MPRA Paper 44083, University Library of Munich, Germany, revised 2010.
    5. Antonios Vlassis, 2011. "La mise en oeuvre de la Convention sur la diversité des expressions culturelles: Portée et enjeux de l'interface entre le commerce et la culture," ULB Institutional Repository 2013/141256, ULB -- Universite Libre de Bruxelles.
    6. Brie, Mircea & Horga, Ioan, 2010. "Europa: frontiere culturale interne sau areal cultural unitar [Europe: Internal Cultural Frontiers or Union Cultural Area]," MPRA Paper 44188, University Library of Munich, Germany.

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