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Image of CREATIVE DESTRUCTION: HOW GLOBALIZATION IS CHANGING THE WORLD`S CULTURES

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CREATIVE DESTRUCTION: HOW GLOBALIZATION IS CHANGING THE WORLD`S CULTURES

COWEN, TYLER - Personal Name;

A Frenchman rents a Hollywood movie. A Thai schoolgirl mimics Madonna. Saddam Hussein chooses Frank Sinatra's "My Way" as the theme song for his fifty-fourth birthday. It is a commonplace that globalization is subverting local culture. But is it helping as much as it hurts? In this strikingly original treatment of a fiercely debated issue, Tyler Cowen makes a bold new case for a more sympathetic understanding of cross-cultural trade. Creative Destruction brings not stale suppositions but an economist's eye to bear on an age-old question: Are market exchange and aesthetic quality friends or foes? On the whole, argues Cowen in clear and vigorous prose, they are friends. Cultural "destruction" breeds not artistic demise but diversity. Through an array of colorful examples from the areas where globalization's critics have been most vocal, Cowen asks what happens when cultures collide through trade, whether technology destroys native arts, why (and whether) Hollywood movies rule the world, whether "globalized" culture is dumbing down societies everywhere, and if national cultures matter at all. Scrutinizing such manifestations of "indigenous" culture as the steel band ensembles of Trinidad, Indian handweaving, and music from Zaire, Cowen finds that they are more vibrant than ever--thanks largely to cross-cultural trade. For all the pressures that market forces exert on individual cultures, diversity typically increases within society, even when cultures become more like each other. Trade enhances the range of individual choice, yielding forms of expression within cultures that flower as never before. While some see cultural decline as a half-empty glass, Cowen sees it as a glass half-full with the stirrings of cultural brilliance. Not all readers will agree, but all will want a say in the debate this exceptional book will stir.


Availability
10000288306 COW tRLC MM (Buku Umum)Available
Detail Information
Series Title
-
Statement of Responsibility
Tyler Cowen
Call Number
306 COW t
Publisher
New Jersey : Princeton University Press., 2002
Collation
vii, 179 p. : ill ; 24cm.
Language
English
ISBN/ISSN
0-691-09016
Classification
306
Content Type
-
Edition
-
Subject(s)
Business
Economics
Culture
Globalizations
International Relations
Specific Detail Info
-
Other version/related

No other version available

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RLC MM FEB-UI
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RLC MM-FEBUI (Library) occupies the right side of the ground floor of the MM FEB UI Building with a reading room capacity of more than 60 people.
 
The MM-FEB UI library service system is closed (closed access); where the user does not have direct access to the collection shelf. Or in other words, users are not allowed to take their own books from the collection shelf

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