Globalization and Indigenous Culture

INOUE Nobutaka, General editor
Institute for Japanese Culture and Classics
Kokugakuin University
1997
Originally published in 1997 by the Institute for Japanese Culture and Classics, Kokugakuin University (ISBN4-905853-04-4). The Japanese printed edition is also available (Gurôbaru-ka to minzoku bunka, Shinshokan, 1997).

CONTENTS

Preface
INOUE Nobutaka
Globalization's Challenge to Indigenous Culture
INOUE Nobutaka
Part I
Opening Address
ABE Yoshiya
Cultural Identity in Europe
ISOMURA Hisanori
Cultural Archetypes and Prospects for Japan, China and Korea (*)
KIM Yong-Woon
Part II
The Information Age and the Globalization of Religion
INOUE Nobutaka
Preserving Taiwan's Indigenous Languages and Cultures: A Discussion in Sociolinguistic Perspective
TSAO Feng-Fu
Global Culture and Its Efects on the Malay Family and Community
CHEU Hock-Tong
Suggestions regarding the Borderless State of Indigenous Culture in the Process of Glboalization
Leslie E. BAUZON
Globalization and Ethnic Culture in Asia
ONOZAWA Masaki
The Paradox of Globalization: Uniformity and Differentiation
SASAO Michiyo
Part III
Religion in Modern Europe: Pertinence of the Globalization Theories?
Liliane VOYÉ
The Plurlingual European Tradition as a Challenge to Globalization
Jeanne PEIFFER
Globalization, Families, and Communities in Europe: Conditions, Comments, and Issues
Olivier DOLLFUS
Comments on the "Global Triad" and "Glocalization"
Roland ROBERTSON
The Shine and Shadow of Globalization
NISHIGAKI Tôru
Duality and Differentiation in European Globalization
KASHIO Naoki
Contributors' Profiles
 

(* Publishing this section online was not permitted by the author.)


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