THE Contemporary World
THE Contemporary World
THE Contemporary World
CONTEMPORARY
WORLD
(GE 3)
By
Floramay S. Abuzo
MODULE III A WORLD OF IDEAS
LESSON 1: Global Media Cultures
LEARNING ACTIVITIES/EXERCISES:
Activity 1: Answer the following questions to deepen your understanding of the
lesson.
1. Compare and contrast the social impacts of television and social media.
Activity 2: Explain briefly. In your own idea, please elaborate your experiences
using social media, media, Television in your day to day activities. What is the
impact, is it all positive or negative?
2. The media industry is, in many ways, perfect for globalization, or the spread of
global trade without regard for traditional political borders. T
3. Much globalized media content comes from the West, particularly from the
United States. T
4. Culture is largely a cultural product, and the transfer of such a product is likely
to have an influence on the recipient’s culture. Increasingly, technology has also
been propelling globalization. F
5. Global Media Cultures explores the relationship between the media, culture
and globalization. T
ASSIGNMENT
Enrichment:
If cultural globalization merely entails the spread of a Western monoculture, what
explains the prevalence of regional cultural trends?
Cultural Trends has been providing in-depth analysis of cultural sector statistics
since 1989. It focuses on key trends within the fields of material culture, media,
performing arts and the historic environment, and it includes coverage of issues
which impact on the sector as a whole, such as the internet, poverty and access
to the arts, and funding. Cultural Trends is based on the assumption that cultural
policy should be based on empirical evidence and it champions the need for
better statistical information on the cultural sector. It aims to: stimulate analysis
and understanding of the arts and wider cultural sector based on relevant and
reliable statistical data; provide a critique of the empirical evidence upon which
arts and wider cultural policy may be formed, implemented, evaluated and
developed; examine the soundness of measures of the performance of
government and public sector bodies in the arts and wider cultural sector; and
encourage improvements in the coverage, timeliness and accessibility of
statistical information on the arts and wider cultural sector.
LESSON II: The Globalization of Religion
LEARNING ACTIVITIES/EXERCISES
Activity 1: Answer the following questions.
1. What are the conflicting ideas between religious thought and the ideology
of globalism?
2. Globalization, much more than culture, has the most difficult relationship with
globalism. F
Christianity
Christianity began as a movement within Judaism at a period when the Jews had
long been dominated culturally and politically by foreign powers and had found in
their religion (rather than in their politics or cultural achievements) the linchpin of
their community. From Amos (8th century bce) onward the religion of Israel was
marked by tension between the concept of monotheism, with its universal ideal of
salvation (for all nations), and the notion of God’s special choice of Israel. In the
Hellenistic Age (323 bce–3rd century ce), the dispersion of the Jews throughout
the kingdoms of the eastern Mediterranean and the Roman Empire reinforced
this universalistic tendency. But the attempts of foreign rulers, especially the
Syrian king Antiochus IV Epiphanes (in 168–165 bce), to impose Greek culture in
Palestine provoked zealous resistance on the part of many Jews, leading to the
revolt of Judas Maccabeus against Antiochus. In Palestinian Judaism the
predominant note was separation and exclusiveness. Jewish missionaries to
other areas were strictly expected to impose the distinctive Jewish customs of
circumcision, kosher food, and Sabbaths and other festivals. Other Jews,
however, were not so exclusive, welcoming Greek culture and accepting
converts without requiring circumcision.
a. A monism of goodness would guarantee prosperity since only good can
exist, whereas a monism of evil would lead to our extinction.
c. When we learn to see Him as Spirit, filling all space, we feel His nearness.
And when we accept God as Principle, we know more clearly what it
means to say, ``All things work together for good to them that love God.''