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                                       Details for article 72 of 156 found articles
 
 
  Imagining/Desiring Cosmopolitanism
 
 
Title: Imagining/Desiring Cosmopolitanism
Author: Bun, Chan Kwok
Appeared in: Global change peace and security
Paging: Volume 15 (2003) nr. 2 pages 139-155
Year: 2003-06
Contents: What happens when two cultures meet? While assimilation continues to be a dominant discourse, this essay argues there are indeed several other possibilities such as alternation, hybridization, and innovation. Three narratives of cultural hybridization and innovation are constructed to provide the empirical substance for an exploration into the cosmopolitanism idea: the importation of Buddhism from India into China; China's social history when read as moments and sites of culture contact as a result of massive migrations and population dispersal; and, in the contemporary era, the syncretism of wedding and burial rituals among the Chinese of Thailand. In all three narratives, the analytical gaze is upon the unspectacular, practical, everyday life fusion and hybridization that happen when groups share a neighbourhood, a history and memory based on living together and collectively solving the practical problems of living that require a transcendence of group loyalties. One culture 'slips into' another culture, half forgetting and remembering itself, and half changing the other. One is allowing oneself to be inhabited by the other, while still recognizing oneself and the other as different. Anyone can be a cosmopolitan; but one must labour against habits of 'mental blindness', through self-cultivation. Dialectically, one is then no less than one, but more than a sum total of two because something new is produced. But it should also be pointed out the cosmopolitan has his or her moments of nervousness-- the so-called dark side of cosmopolitanism.
Publisher: Routledge
Source file: Elektronische Wetenschappelijke Tijdschriften
 
 

                             Details for article 72 of 156 found articles
 
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