1991
DOI: 10.1146/annurev.an.20.100191.001315
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

Making National Cultures in The Global Ecumene

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
1
1
1
1

Citation Types

0
26
0
2

Year Published

1996
1996
2018
2018

Publication Types

Select...
5
3
1

Relationship

0
9

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 303 publications
(28 citation statements)
references
References 96 publications
0
26
0
2
Order By: Relevance
“…Friedman (1990) reports that in the former colony that is now the People's Republic of the Congo, while the Congolese have access to both less expensive locally bottled Coke and a more expensive canned variety imported from Holland, status is established by displaying the imported can on the dashboard of local cars. Such phenomena are not peripheral to identity, since food, clothing, jewelry, music, sports, and other consumer goods and services are central to the processes through which national and ethnic identities are established and reinforced (Belk & Paun, 1995;Douglas & Isherwood, 1979;Foster, 1991). When the Congolese consume, the satisfaction gained is not in the small contribution to lifestyle experience that these objects convey in the West, but in the constitution of an entirely different and more prestigious self (J.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Friedman (1990) reports that in the former colony that is now the People's Republic of the Congo, while the Congolese have access to both less expensive locally bottled Coke and a more expensive canned variety imported from Holland, status is established by displaying the imported can on the dashboard of local cars. Such phenomena are not peripheral to identity, since food, clothing, jewelry, music, sports, and other consumer goods and services are central to the processes through which national and ethnic identities are established and reinforced (Belk & Paun, 1995;Douglas & Isherwood, 1979;Foster, 1991). When the Congolese consume, the satisfaction gained is not in the small contribution to lifestyle experience that these objects convey in the West, but in the constitution of an entirely different and more prestigious self (J.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Foster, 1991). The purpose of such acts, in this case legislated in the convention, is to secure for all times the patrimony of humankind, those objects that epitomize the community and thus constitute the property of that community.…”
Section: Preservation and Monitoring -Centres Of Power Nodes And Netmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Media render, with all the immediacy of visual images and informative texts, the peculiar co-ordination of space, time, and people (territory, history, and society) that makes humankind an identifiable kind of imagined and moral community (cf. Foster, 1991). In this respect the products can be regarded as virtual museums, as virtual versions of global Skansen.…”
Section: Diffusion and Representation -Global Skansen On Displaymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In other words, the practice of 'Japanese-ness', although perpetuated as a necessary but not always a sufficient part of being an Aikidoka, was often propagated via bodies that were 'un-Japanese' in origin. At the same time, the practice of Aikido also contained, through its practices, an implicit re-culturalizing and re-nationalizing narrative for persons of Japanese backgrounds that is also undeniably part of a global ecumene where there are no longer distinct islands of culture (Foster, 1991;Hannerz, 1998).…”
Section: Bodies Of Culture: Becoming An Aikidokamentioning
confidence: 99%