A pervasive force that evades easy analysis, globalization has come to 
represent the export and import of culture, the speed and intensity of 
which has increased to unprecedented levels in recent years. The Cultures of Globalization
 presents an international panel of intellectuals who consider the 
process of globalization as it concerns the transformation of the 
economic into the cultural and vice versa; the rise of consumer culture 
around the world; the production and cancellation of forms of 
subjectivity; and the challenges it presents to national identity, local
 culture, and traditional forms of everyday life. 
Discussing 
overlapping themes of transnational consequence, the contributors to 
this volume describe how the global character of technology, 
communication networks, consumer culture, intellectual discourse, the 
arts, and mass entertainment have all been affected by recent worldwide 
trends. Appropriate to such diversity of material, the authors approach 
their topics from a variety of theoretical perspectives, including those
 of linguistics, sociology, economics, anthropology, and the law. Essays
 examine such topics as free trade, capitalism, the North and South, 
Eurocentrism, language migration, art and cinema, social fragmentation, 
sovereignty and nationhood, higher education, environmental justice, 
wealth and poverty, transnational corporations, and global culture. 
Bridging the spheres of economic, political, and cultural inquiry, The Cultures of Globalization offers crucial insights into many of the most significant changes occurring in today’s world.