Globalization. George Ritzer
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Название: Globalization

Автор: George Ritzer

Издательство: John Wiley & Sons Limited

Жанр: Социология

Серия:

isbn: 9781119527312

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СКАЧАТЬ as African Americanization, there is certainly Native American, Latin–American, and Jewish–American Americanization (e.g. as discussed above in the case of the Holocaust), and so on. Furthermore, there is growing diversity in the US increasing the number of possibilities. An example is the growing number of Latin Americans and their exports to various countries, especially to Central and South America (e.g. of money in the form of remittances; see Chapter 10).

      More recently, many people around the world have been shocked at how the US handled the COVID-19 pandemic in its early days. While most countries implemented strict measures for social distancing, mask requirements, and quarantines, the US resisted many of these efforts. The virus hit China and Italy especially hard, which gave other countries – such as the US – more time to respond (Associated Press 2020). But despite the additional time to prepare, the medical knowledge about its threat, and the economic resources to handle it aggressively, the US and the Trump administration downplayed the threat, often referring to it as a hoax. As a result, it led the world in COVID-19 cases and deaths, with one of the highest per capita infection rates. At the same time, the US made efforts to acquire as much of the early vaccines produced elsewhere as possible elsewhere and outbid other purchasers to obtain medical supplies headed to other countries. Responses like this were common:

      To a watching world, the absence of a fair, affordable US healthcare system, the cut-throat contest between American states for scarce medical supplies, the disproportionate death toll among ethnic minorities, chaotic social distancing rules, and a lack of centralised coordination are reminiscent of a poor, developing country, not the most powerful, influential nation on earth. That’s a title the US appears on course to lose – a fall from grace that may prove irreversible. (Tisdall 2020)

      Compared to the US, citizens in other countries were far more agreeable to measures needed to curtail the virus, and interpreted them as necessary for the common good. Many commentators have wondered if the global reputation of the US will ever recover. (Associated Press 2020)

      Certainly, readers can debate whether or not Americanization is declining, but it is clear that it certainly was a powerful force in the past and much of globalization, at least until very recently, has been American-led. At the minimum, that (recent) history needs to be recognized for what it was – heavily dominated by Americanization. Furthermore, no matter how far Americanization may have already declined in importance, it will be a long time before most of the nations and areas affected by it in the past will be free of its highly diverse and often powerful effects. The effects of Americanization will continue to be felt in many nations for years to come even if we think of it as slowing or even halting completely (a clearly erroneous view, at least at the present time).

      A more clear example of Latin-Americanization was the politics of Trump himself (Lovato 2018). For decades, many Latin American countries have been led by a “caudillo,” or strong man using fiery rhetoric. A Washington Post reporter went so far as to declare Trump “the US’s first Latin American president” (Tharoor 2017). He was a clear departure from American political norms, and rather draws upon extreme self-inflation, tough talk, authoritarianism, machismo, and public humiliation to attack his enemies. By mimicking Latin American (from both left and right) strong men in style, he brought forth a different kind of Americanization.

      Consumerism and consumer culture are at the heart of Americanization. Victoria de Grazia’s Irresistible Empire: America’s Advance through 20th-Century Europe (de Grazia 2005: 3) examines the deeper forces in the Americanization of consumer culture, but with a somewhat different focus on:

      The rise of the great imperium [the United States] with the outlook of a great emporium. This was the United States during the reign of what I call the Market Empire. An empire without frontiers, it arose during the twentieth century, reached its apogee during its second half, and showed symptoms of disintegration toward its close. Its most distant perimeters would be marked by the insatiable ambitions of its leading corporations for global markets, the ever vaster sales territories charted by state agencies and private enterprise, the far-flung influence of its business networks, the coin of recognition of its ubiquitous brands, and the intimate familiarity with the American way of life that all these engendered in peoples around the world. Its impetus and instruments derived from the same revolution in mass consumption that was ever more visibly reshaping the lives of its own citizens.

      It was, in her view, the exportation of America’s innovations in the realm of mass consumption that helped lead, through mass marketing, to the “fostering of common consumption practices across the most diverse cultures” (de Grazia 2005: 3).