The Emerging Monoculture: Assimilation and the Model Minority
Kramer brings together experts from a variety of minority backgrounds and from around the world to give their perspectives on the most pervasive ideology today, globalism. The basic premise is that a developed country is different from a developed community. They need not be mutually exclusive, but neither is it assumed that they are necessarily consonant.

The various essays offer answers to such vital questions as What does it mean to become a 'global citizen'? and What does it mean to be a 'model minority' in a global economy? The process of becoming a mainstream person involves being first marginalized with the implication that something is inadequate about one's self. The process of assimilationism is manifested as various forms of enforced and/or rewarded acculturation. With the vast human migration currently underway, the notion of assimilation has become a global phenomenon. What is occurring, Kramer and his colleagues demonstrate, is a worldwide shift from the village milieu to the city lifestyle. This migration is seen as a polycentric and global phenomenon whereby the promised land is nowhere in particular, but, instead, a way of life and mindset, an urban lifestyle. This process is far more than a simple change in geography. Moving from the village to the cityscape involves a mutation in worldview and self-identity. Additional questions asked throughout the collection are What set of persuasive assumptions are leading the world in this direction? and What might be lost in the process? A provocative collection for scholars, students, and other researchers involved with development studies, multiculturalism, and urbanization.

"1112076584"
The Emerging Monoculture: Assimilation and the Model Minority
Kramer brings together experts from a variety of minority backgrounds and from around the world to give their perspectives on the most pervasive ideology today, globalism. The basic premise is that a developed country is different from a developed community. They need not be mutually exclusive, but neither is it assumed that they are necessarily consonant.

The various essays offer answers to such vital questions as What does it mean to become a 'global citizen'? and What does it mean to be a 'model minority' in a global economy? The process of becoming a mainstream person involves being first marginalized with the implication that something is inadequate about one's self. The process of assimilationism is manifested as various forms of enforced and/or rewarded acculturation. With the vast human migration currently underway, the notion of assimilation has become a global phenomenon. What is occurring, Kramer and his colleagues demonstrate, is a worldwide shift from the village milieu to the city lifestyle. This migration is seen as a polycentric and global phenomenon whereby the promised land is nowhere in particular, but, instead, a way of life and mindset, an urban lifestyle. This process is far more than a simple change in geography. Moving from the village to the cityscape involves a mutation in worldview and self-identity. Additional questions asked throughout the collection are What set of persuasive assumptions are leading the world in this direction? and What might be lost in the process? A provocative collection for scholars, students, and other researchers involved with development studies, multiculturalism, and urbanization.

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The Emerging Monoculture: Assimilation and the Model Minority

The Emerging Monoculture: Assimilation and the Model Minority

by Eric Kramer
The Emerging Monoculture: Assimilation and the Model Minority

The Emerging Monoculture: Assimilation and the Model Minority

by Eric Kramer

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Overview

Kramer brings together experts from a variety of minority backgrounds and from around the world to give their perspectives on the most pervasive ideology today, globalism. The basic premise is that a developed country is different from a developed community. They need not be mutually exclusive, but neither is it assumed that they are necessarily consonant.

The various essays offer answers to such vital questions as What does it mean to become a 'global citizen'? and What does it mean to be a 'model minority' in a global economy? The process of becoming a mainstream person involves being first marginalized with the implication that something is inadequate about one's self. The process of assimilationism is manifested as various forms of enforced and/or rewarded acculturation. With the vast human migration currently underway, the notion of assimilation has become a global phenomenon. What is occurring, Kramer and his colleagues demonstrate, is a worldwide shift from the village milieu to the city lifestyle. This migration is seen as a polycentric and global phenomenon whereby the promised land is nowhere in particular, but, instead, a way of life and mindset, an urban lifestyle. This process is far more than a simple change in geography. Moving from the village to the cityscape involves a mutation in worldview and self-identity. Additional questions asked throughout the collection are What set of persuasive assumptions are leading the world in this direction? and What might be lost in the process? A provocative collection for scholars, students, and other researchers involved with development studies, multiculturalism, and urbanization.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780275973124
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Publication date: 02/28/2003
Pages: 352
Product dimensions: 6.14(w) x 9.21(h) x 0.81(d)

About the Author

ERICMARK KRAMER is Associate Professor of Communication at the University of Oklahoma. He is a member of the editorial board of various jourbanals and has published extensively. Among his latest books are Modern/Postmodern: Off the Beaten Path of Antimodernism and Postmodernism and Race.

Table of Contents

Introduction: Assimilation and the Model Minority Ideology by Eric Mark Kramer
Gaiatsu and Cultural Judo by Eric Mark Kramer
The Hidden Justification for Assimilation, Multiculturalism, and the Prospects for Democracy by John W. Murphy and Luigi Esposito
Adopting the Caucasian "Look": Reorganizing the Minority Face by Masako Isa and Eric Mark Kramer
The Violence of Assimilation and Psychological Well-Being by Chi-Ah Chun and Jung Min Choi
The Ainu: A Discourse on Being Japanese by Masazumi Maruyama
Headache and Heartbreak: The Elusiveness of "Model Minority" Status Attainment for African Americans by Charlton D. McIlwain and Lonnie Johnson
A Communication Dilemma Between the Non-Disabled and People with Disabilities in Japan by Miho Iwakuma
Successful Indians: Benevolent Assimilation and Indian Identity by Karola and Philip Lujan
Abandoned People in Japan: The First Generation of Koreans in Japan by Richiko Ikeda
Old and New Worlds by Algis Michunas
Demythologizing the "Model Minority" by Eungjun Min
Asian Indians and the Model Minority Narrative: A Neocolonial System by Archana J. Bhatt
A World of Cookie-Cutter Faces by Rachael Rainwater-McClure, Weslynn Reed, and Eric Mark Kramer
Cosmopoly: Occidentalism and the New World Order by Eric Mark Kramer
Comprehensive Bibliography
Name Index
Subject Index

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