Migrating Meanings : Sharing Keywords in a Global World

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Bibliographic Details
Title: Migrating Meanings : Sharing Keywords in a Global World
Description: This book looks into the fundamental concepts with which we think, and which form the key concepts for discussing democracy in the Western world: ‘the individual', ‘the people', and ‘the citizen'. But it is also about the emerging political context within which we live, Europe. The question is: Does democracy mean the same thing for a Chinese worker in the suburbs of a metropolis and for a worker in Newcastle or Glasgow? Do the words for ‘citizen'and ‘the people'coincide in English and Chinese? How do the Chinese perceive Europe? As a competitor, an ally, a source of inspiration? Or as an enemy? What have we to learn about ourselves from seeing our worldview from another perspective? Can we enter into the Chinese worldview? And in these times of radical changes in geopolitics in the globalized world, how is that Chinese worldview changing? And can we not consider the Chinese worldview as a myriad of political, cultural, and religious worldviews? If so, how do those worldviews compete?
Authors: James W. Underhill, Mariarosaria Gianninoto
Resource Type: eBook.
Subjects: Language and languages--Variation, Languages in contact, Language and languages--Globalization, Linguistic change
Categories: LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES / General
Database: eBook Collection (EBSCOhost)
Description
Abstract:This book looks into the fundamental concepts with which we think, and which form the key concepts for discussing democracy in the Western world: ‘the individual', ‘the people', and ‘the citizen'. But it is also about the emerging political context within which we live, Europe. The question is: Does democracy mean the same thing for a Chinese worker in the suburbs of a metropolis and for a worker in Newcastle or Glasgow? Do the words for ‘citizen'and ‘the people'coincide in English and Chinese? How do the Chinese perceive Europe? As a competitor, an ally, a source of inspiration? Or as an enemy? What have we to learn about ourselves from seeing our worldview from another perspective? Can we enter into the Chinese worldview? And in these times of radical changes in geopolitics in the globalized world, how is that Chinese worldview changing? And can we not consider the Chinese worldview as a myriad of political, cultural, and religious worldviews? If so, how do those worldviews compete?
ISBN:9780748696949
9780748696956
9781474447379