Saturday, July 21, 2012

What is missing from that definition?

Week 2 - 17th July, 2012
 

  I found that it is so hard to define ‘globalisation’, neither scholarly nor unscholarly. Indeed, every scholar has their own recognition and interpretation of globalisation, which makes it harder to unify a definition and usually those definitions have something missing as time goes by.

  Albrow (1990: 45) defined globalisation as ‘all those processes by which the people of the world are incorporated into a single world society, global society’.

  Albrow’s definition might be good at the time of 1990 but it is an out-date definition after 22 years later.

  In my opinion, there are two ambiguous parts.

First, it undefined the processes of globalisation. I don’t get a chance to read the words before and after that definition, maybe it well defined the processes of globalisation on Albrow’s book. But if it reads independently, I wouldn’t understand what those processes are and how those processes make a single world society. It should be mentioned in the definition, that the processes of globalisation have occasioned a mixing of worldwide economic, political (e.g. a destabilizing of nationalist positions), cultural (e.g. the rise of hybrid cultures) and social relation (e.g. the study of postmodernism and post-colonialism). Besides, the key role of mediation in the process of globalisation should be also mentioned. It is important to look at the ways media and communications are present in politics, economic and culture, directly and indirectly (Rantanen, 2005, pp.5).

Second, in what ways the world becomes a single world society, a global society? It surely doesn’t mean there is no nationality, no race. It involves the flows of globalisation and mediation. For instant, it is a compression of time and space (Bauman, 1999), the movement of news and information from telegraph to radio and print, and to Facebook and Youtube.

Reference: Rantanen, T 2005, ‘Theorizing media globalization’, The media and globalization, Sage, London, pp. 1–18.




2 comments:

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  2. The post covers the concept of postmodernism and post-colonialism and focuses on the ambiguity of the definitions provided in terms of globalisation by arguing how globalisation can make the world into a single world society. The author as well suggested that globalisation is a mixture of world economy, politics, culture and sociality. The author also argued that globalisation is more likely a transition from the traditional media to the Internet. However, the term 'compression of time and space' can be more clearly defined in order to cover the concept of globalisation in a more clear way.

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