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  1. Nationalism, globalization and glocalization.Victor Roudometof - 2014 - Thesis Eleven 122 (1):18-33.
    This article offers a reassessment of the relationship among nationalism, globalization and glocalization. Conventionally, globalization is viewed as a historically recent challenge to the nation. It is argued that globalization, in contrast, is a long-term historical process. The emergence and perseverance of the nation is linked to outcomes of global processes, such as the experience of globality. Two conceptual links among the nation-form, historical globalization and cultural glocalization, are presented to demonstrate the salience of this perspective. First, globalization’s dialectic of (...)
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  • Liquid Modernity.Zygmunt Bauman - 2000 - Polity Press ; Blackwell.
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  • Globalization: Social Theory and Global Culture.Roland Robertson - 1992 - SAGE.
    A stimulating appraisal of a crucial contemporary theme, this comprehensive analysis of globalizaton offers a distinctively cultural perspective on the social theory of the contemporary world. This perspective considers the world as a whole, going beyond conventional distinctions between the global and the local and between the universal and the particular. Its cultural approach emphasizes the political and economic significance of shifting conceptions of, and forms of participation in, an increasingly compressed world. At the same time the book shows why (...)
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  • Institutional conditions for diffusion.David Strang & John W. Meyer - 1993 - Theory and Society 22 (4):487-511.
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  • Handbook of social theory.Barry Smart & George Ritzer (eds.) - 2001 - Thousands Oaks, Calif.: SAGE.
    This book is an indispensable resource for anyone interested in the roots, current debates and future development of social theory. It draws together a team of international scholars, and presents an authoritative and panoramic critical survey of the field. The first section, examines the classical tradition. Included here are critical discussions of Comte, Spencer, Marx, Durkheim, Weber, Simmel, Mead, Freud, Mannheim and classical feminist thought, demonstrating not only the critical significance of classical writings, but also their continuing relevance. The second (...)
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  • The global age: state and society beyond modernity.Martin Albrow - 1996 - Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press.
    Taking issue with those who see recent social transformations as an extension of modernity, the author contends that social theory must confront an epochal change from the modern era to a new era of globality, in which human beings can conceive of forces at work on a global scale, and in which they espouse values that take the globe as their reference point. The book begins by assessing the problems of writing about modernity, showing how narratives of an endlessly self-perpetuating (...)
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  • Global Modernities.Mike Featherstone, Scott Lash & Roland Robertson (eds.) - 1995 - Sage Publications.
    Global Modernities is a sustained commentary on the international character of the most microcosmic practices. It demonstrates how the global increasingly informs the regional, so deconstructing ideas like the `nation-state' and `national sovereignty'. The spatialization of social theory, hybridization and bio-politics are among the critical issues discussed.
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  • Hybrid Cultures: Strategies for Entering and Leaving Modernity.Néstor García Canclini - 2005 - U of Minnesota Press.
    Examines the threats to Latin American cultural identity in a global marketplace - now with a new introduction!
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  • Global networks.R. J. Holton - 2008 - New York: Palgrave-Macmillan.
    Global network research is an exciting new area of social analysis. This book is the first to provide a thorough investigation of global network links across time and space. Robert Holton demonstrates the way in which technological and interpersonal networks organise global society, providing vivid examples from the present and the past. This text gives practical advice on how to research global networks, and brings together leading theory and new evidence on the subject for all students learning about globalisation and (...)
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  • The Enclave Society: Towards a Sociology of Immobility.Bryan S. Turner - 2007 - European Journal of Social Theory 10 (2):287-304.
    In contemporary sociology, there has been significant interest in the idea of mobility, the decline of the nation state, the rise of flexible citizenship, and the porous quality of political boundaries. There is much talk of medicine without borders and sociology without borders. These social developments are obviously linked to the processes of globalization, leading some to argue that we need a `sociology beyond society' in order to account for these flows and global networks. In this article, I propose an (...)
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  • The glocalizations of Eastern Orthodox Christianity.Victor Roudometof - 2013 - European Journal of Social Theory 16 (2):226-245.
    This article introduces the notion of multiple glocalizations as a means of analysing Christianity’s historical record and argues that multiple glocalizations are constitutive of the intertwining between religion and historical globalization. It proposes that four concrete forms of glocalization can be observed: vernacularization, indigenization, nationalization and transnationalization. Each of these offers different combinations of universal religiosity and local particularism. The salience of this interpretation is demonstrated through a cursory analysis of the historical record of Christianity’s fragmentation. It is argued that (...)
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  • Cultures and Societies in a changing world.Wendy Griswold & Soraj Hongladarom - 1999 - AI and Society 13 (4):446-449.
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  • Globalisation to Glocalisation: A Conceptual Exploration.Habibul Haque Khondker - 2005 - Intellectual Discourse 13 (2).
    The socio-cultural changes in Southeast Asia, particularly in Malaysia and Singapore, can be beneficially examined in terms of the concepts of globalisation and glocalisation. The two concepts are related and their evolution and transformation highlight the tangled relationship between the discipline of sociology and globalisation. Although the sociological concepts and theories in the Western sociological discourses have a general import, there are problems in the application of these in the local contexts of Malaysia and Singapore. This calls for a critical (...)
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