Wednesday, 12 March 2014

Cultural Imperialism



             

             First of all, cultural imperialism is the practice of promoting a more powerful culture over a least known or desirable culture. It happens when an economically developed countries try to spread their cultural and traditional activities to less developed countries. The result is that less developed counties would eventually adopt and adjust to the culture suggested to them. There are both advantages and disadvantages to this, causing numerous benefits and negative impacts.
             The Burger King which was found in United States is now one of the most famous fast food restaurant competing against McDonalds and other large companies. According to my research, Japanese people are very passionate toward Burger King’s burgers. In specific, Japanese kids favors the most among other fast food. With a huge success from all-you-can-eat promotion in 2010, Burger King is holding the same promotion in 2013 starting on November 15 until December. The name of the promotion was called “BiKing” which derived from the word “Viking” to describe buffets in Japan. Since Japanese people had hard time pronouncing “v,” letter “b” was used to signify the B in burger king and at the same time make it similar to the word “Viking.” In this promotion, consumers had to order the large size set of Whopper, Whopper with cheese, or fresh avocado which is around $2 more expensive than the regular sized whopper. When one person finished the meal, the person had the opportunity to order more burgers for free for 30 minutes. This event was a huge success both economically and spreading America’s culture on fast food.
             Another example of cultural imperialism can be Disney. Disney is welcomed by children all over the world. The cartoons are dominated by Disney and Disney has come up with diverse characters that have successfully gained children’s attention. However, Disney contains a lot of cultural symbols that are biased. Children unconsciously watch the cartoons without knowing that they are unethical. For example, Disney portrays Arabs as barbers or villain which might make children to think all the Arabs are evil. On the other hand, Americans are described as the heroes. So, Disney is giving wrong information to the children about other race and tells good things about America.
             As I have mentioned, cultural imperialism can be both positive and negative. One culture can greatly increase their products’ consumption level or spread their culture. On the other hand, through cultural imperialism, people might attain wrong and biased information which can limit people’s potential to think in a broader perspective

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2 comments:

  1. Your example with the Burger King shows great statistics that can support the idea that consumerism is promoted from cultural imperialism because of the huge profits. Do you think that this is a positive result of imperialism when you take the perspective of local restaurant owners in Japan?

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  2. Harry, this is a top post for sure. I hope you don't mind me sharing it in a tweet. You took on the more difficult concept of cultural imperialism and I think your Disney example is quite strong, although it is definitely debatable. The question I have for you is, do you think these companies INTENTIONALLY spread American culture? What I mean is, do you think Burger King and McDonalds are doing what they're doing because they want people to live more like Americans for some particular reason or do you think this is an unintended consequence of the strategies they enact to sell more of their products?

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