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World Culture
Origins and Consequences
Frank J. Lechner (Author), John Boli (Author)
9780631226765, Wiley
Hardback, published 13 April 2005
288 pages
24.4 x 16.5 x 2.2 cm, 0.539 kg
"Lechner and Boli's scholarship is extensive, theoretical, abstract and synthetic ... The authors engage in conceptual and theoretical refinement and synthesis of existing scholarship and extend that intellectual frontier with their own substantial contributions. Lechner and Boli ... deserve special commendation for the rich and illuminating historical context and examples." Choice "Lechner and Boli have done their homework and the compendium they offer is valuable in itself." "This volume provides a fascinating, and immensely broad-ranging, call to understand the complex inter-relationships between geopolitical forces and those resilient urban lives. Whilst as a source of multiple departures it should be of interest to an equally broad ranging audience, for those particularly curious about the often-neglected ways in which extreme ideologies seek to construct and reconstruct understandings of cities there is much to consider." Andrew Inch, Oxford Brookes University
The International History Review
This book explores the development, content, and impact of world culture. Combining several of the most fruitful theoretical perspectives on world culture, including the world polity approach and globalization theory, the book gives a historical treatment of the development of world culture and assesses the complex impact of world culture on people, organizations, and societies. This is a provocative, synthetic, and grounded interpretation of world culture that is essential for any student or scholar of globalization and world affairs.
List of Tables vi Acknowledgments vii List of Abbreviations viii 1 Introduction: The Olympic Games and the Meaning of World Culture 1 2 Analyzing World Culture: Alternative Theories 30 3 Tracing World Culture: A Brief History 60 4 Constructing World Culture: UN Meetings as Global Ritual 81 5 Sustaining World Culture: The Infrastructure of Technology and Organizations 109 6 Differentiating World Culture: National Identity and the Pursuit of Diversity 135 7 Transforming World Culture: The Antiglobalization Movement as Cultural Critique 153 8 Expanding World Culture: Pentecostalism as a Global Movement 173 9 Opposing World Culture: Islamism and the Clash of Civilizations 191 10 Instituting World Culture: The International Criminal Court and Global Governance 215 11 Epilogue: Reflections on World Culture 234 References 241 Index 261
Subject Areas: Sociology & anthropology [JH]
