Matches in Harvard for { <http://id.lib.harvard.edu/aleph/005691502/catalog> ?p ?o. }
Showing items 1 to 33 of
33
with 100 items per page.
- catalog abstract "Jihad vs. McWorld is an analysis of the fundamental conflict of our times: consumerist capitalism versus religious and tribal fundamentalism. Jihad vs. McWorld offers a lens through which to understand the chaotic events of the post-Cold War world. Benjamin R. Barber argues that if you look only at the business section of the daily newspaper, you would be convinced that the world was increasingly united, that borders were increasingly porous, that corporate mergers were steadily knitting the globe into a single international market. But if you focus only on the front page, you would be convinced of just the opposite: that the world was increasingly riven by fratricide, civil war, and the breakup of nations. Barber provides a single map that unites these two sides of the same coin, and convincingly demonstrates that what capitalism and fundamentalism have in common is a distaste for democracy. For both, in different ways, lay siege to the nation-state itself - heretofore the only guarantor of conditions that have permitted democracy to flourish. Democracy, Barber suggests, may well fall victim to a twin-pronged attack: by a global capitalism run rampant whose essential driving force is nihilistic, at its root destructive of traditional values as it seeks to maximize profit-taking at virtually any moral or religious or spiritual cost; and by religious, tribal, and ethnic fanatics whose various creeds are stamped by intolerance and a rage against the "other." The paradox at the core of this bold book is that the tendencies of both Jihad and McWorld are at work, both visible sometimes in the same country at the same instant. Jihad pursues a bloody politics of identity, while McWorld seeks a bloodless economics of profit. Belonging by default to McWorld, everyone is compelled to enroll in Jihad. But no one is any longer a citizen. And, asks Barber, without citizens, how can there be democracy?".
- catalog alternative "Jihad versus McWorld".
- catalog contributor b8014216.
- catalog created "c1995.".
- catalog date "1995".
- catalog date "c1995.".
- catalog dateCopyrighted "c1995.".
- catalog description "Barber provides a single map that unites these two sides of the same coin, and convincingly demonstrates that what capitalism and fundamentalism have in common is a distaste for democracy. For both, in different ways, lay siege to the nation-state itself - heretofore the only guarantor of conditions that have permitted democracy to flourish. Democracy, Barber suggests, may well fall victim to a twin-pronged attack: by a global capitalism run rampant whose essential driving force is nihilistic, at its root destructive of traditional values as it seeks to maximize profit-taking at virtually any moral or religious or spiritual cost; and by religious, tribal, and ethnic fanatics whose various creeds are stamped by intolerance and a rage against the "other."".
- catalog description "Includes bibliographical references (p. [302]-361) and index.".
- catalog description "Jihad vs. McWorld is an analysis of the fundamental conflict of our times: consumerist capitalism versus religious and tribal fundamentalism. Jihad vs. McWorld offers a lens through which to understand the chaotic events of the post-Cold War world. Benjamin R. Barber argues that if you look only at the business section of the daily newspaper, you would be convinced that the world was increasingly united, that borders were increasingly porous, that corporate mergers were steadily knitting the globe into a single international market. But if you focus only on the front page, you would be convinced of just the opposite: that the world was increasingly riven by fratricide, civil war, and the breakup of nations.".
- catalog description "The paradox at the core of this bold book is that the tendencies of both Jihad and McWorld are at work, both visible sometimes in the same country at the same instant. Jihad pursues a bloody politics of identity, while McWorld seeks a bloodless economics of profit. Belonging by default to McWorld, everyone is compelled to enroll in Jihad. But no one is any longer a citizen. And, asks Barber, without citizens, how can there be democracy?".
- catalog description "pt. I. The New World of McWorld. 1. The Old Economy and the Birth of a New McWorld. 2. The Resource Imperative: The Passing of Autarky and the Fall of the West. 3. The Industrial Sector and the Rise of the East. 4. From Hard Goods to Soft Goods. 5. From Soft Goods to Service. 6. Hollyworld: McWorld's Videology. 7. Television and MTV: McWorld's Noisy Soul. 8. Teleliterature and the Theme Parking of McWorld. 9. Who Owns McWorld? The Media Merger Frenzy -- pt. II. The Old World of Jihad. 10. Jihad vs. McWorld or Jihad via McWorld? 11. Jihad Within McWorld: The "Democracies" 12. China and the Not Necessarily Democratic Pacific Rim. 13. Jihad Within McWorld: "Transitional Democracies" 14. Essential Jihad: Islam and Fundamentalism -- pt. III. Jihad Vs. McWorld. 15. Jihad and McWorld in the New World Disorder. 16. Wild Capitalism vs. Democracy. 17. Capitalism vs. Democracy in Russia. 18. The Colonization of East Germany by McWorld.".
- catalog extent "xii, 381 p. ;".
- catalog hasFormat "Jihad vs. McWorld.".
- catalog identifier "0812923502 (acid-free paper)".
- catalog isFormatOf "Jihad vs. McWorld.".
- catalog issued "1995".
- catalog issued "c1995.".
- catalog language "eng".
- catalog publisher "New York : Times Books,".
- catalog relation "Jihad vs. McWorld.".
- catalog subject "909.82/9 20".
- catalog subject "Capitalism.".
- catalog subject "Democracy.".
- catalog subject "HM201 .B37 1995".
- catalog subject "Nationalism.".
- catalog subject "Religious fundamentalism.".
- catalog subject "Social history 20th century.".
- catalog subject "Social values.".
- catalog tableOfContents "pt. I. The New World of McWorld. 1. The Old Economy and the Birth of a New McWorld. 2. The Resource Imperative: The Passing of Autarky and the Fall of the West. 3. The Industrial Sector and the Rise of the East. 4. From Hard Goods to Soft Goods. 5. From Soft Goods to Service. 6. Hollyworld: McWorld's Videology. 7. Television and MTV: McWorld's Noisy Soul. 8. Teleliterature and the Theme Parking of McWorld. 9. Who Owns McWorld? The Media Merger Frenzy -- pt. II. The Old World of Jihad. 10. Jihad vs. McWorld or Jihad via McWorld? 11. Jihad Within McWorld: The "Democracies" 12. China and the Not Necessarily Democratic Pacific Rim. 13. Jihad Within McWorld: "Transitional Democracies" 14. Essential Jihad: Islam and Fundamentalism -- pt. III. Jihad Vs. McWorld. 15. Jihad and McWorld in the New World Disorder. 16. Wild Capitalism vs. Democracy. 17. Capitalism vs. Democracy in Russia. 18. The Colonization of East Germany by McWorld.".
- catalog title "Jihad versus McWorld".
- catalog title "Jihad vs. McWorld / Benjamin R. Barber.".
- catalog type "text".