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Global Culture for a Globalized World

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  • Global Culture for a Globalized World

    vision magazine, CA
    June 2 2006

    Global Culture for a Globalized World
    by Michael DeGuzman Nobleza
    . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .


    The recent images flashing on LA's KCAL-9 News have been stunning.
    The heated debate around illegal immigration in the U.S. has led to
    thousands of people on the streets of downtown L.A., young and old,
    waving American, Mexican, Guatemalan, and Salvadorian flags. Korean
    immigrants, dressed in traditional garb, marched in solidarity with
    other immigrant groups. In the Crenshaw community, African-American
    pro-immigrant advocates waving the red, black and green Black
    Nationalist flag faced off against the `stars and stripes' of a group
    concerned about the impact of illegal immigration on the
    employability of low-income African-Americans. The flag of Armenia
    proudly flew around Hollywood on April 24th to commemorate the
    Armenian genocide. On the anniversary of the start of the war in
    Iraq, Muslim American mothers, donning headscarves, made a fervent
    call for peace. On the surface, such symbolism might reflect an
    increasingly fractured multicultural society. However, a deeper
    reflection of these images helps us realize that Los Angeles-home to
    188 distinct immigrant communities and innumerable cultural and
    linguistic communities-represents a Global Culture that resonates
    with a globalizing world.
    It takes culture time to catch up with political and economic
    changes. We can legislate new policy and enforce new taxes in short
    order, but it takes time to change how we look at the world and how
    we act based on that worldview. For years, international relations
    scholars and economists have bemoaned the effects of globalization.
    They've criticized the spread of McDonalds and Starbucks to the
    world's farthest flung locales and shown concern over the
    instantaneity of information flashed across the bottom of CNN's
    regular reporting. What these academics have yet to account for is
    the lived experience of diversity in major metropolises, like LA, San
    Francisco, San Diego and New York, not as some bicoastal phenomenon
    but as the cultural reality of the 21st century.
    What, then, is `Global Culture'? What values does it have that speak
    to today's world affairs? Ten years ago, `global' in the context of
    Los Angeles would've meant efforts to make everyone speak English in
    the workplace, while making sure Cinco de Mayo and Chinese New Year
    were somehow celebrated. Global used to mean `universal', that the
    same ideas and values applied to everyone. Nowadays, the only real
    thing that applies universally is the idea that nothing is universal;
    the world for which today's Global Culture exists is characterized by
    the diversity of its ideas. In a world saturated by information and
    communications technology, it is virtually impossible to not be able
    to find at least ten different perspectives on any given issue.
    Global Culture is embracing multiplicity. It's about a Latino mayor
    speaking to L.A.'s Jewish-American community about the Holocaust.
    It's about Scottish and Irish citizens marching together with
    Nicaraguan day laborers.




    It's about affluent adults in the San Fernando Valley serving as
    literacy volunteers to struggling and poor students. Culture used to
    mean distinguishing yourself from `the others' who were different
    from you. In contrast, Global Culture has meant intentionally
    blurring the lines in the name of connection and unity.
    Global Culture is the re-imagining of community. That Sudanese `lost
    boys' who have resettled in California can reach out to and maintain
    strong bonds with family and friends still in Africa proves that
    Global Culture is no respecter of geography. Christmas posadas in
    east L.A. and various cultural festivals throughout the city
    exemplify the idea that we can find home in many places at the same
    time: in the local communities in which we physically find ourselves
    and in the more abstracted homelands overseas from which our parents
    came. Global Culture means being comfortable with being part of
    different communities simultaneously.
    Global Culture also means choice. A recent study conducted by ReBoot
    of Jewish-American generational perspectives on the Jewish faith
    found that the so-called `iPod Generation' valued the ability to be
    selective about which parts of their faith and other faiths they
    wished to practice. Global Culture is about having the opportunity to
    visit the Baha'i Center, the Hare Krishna Community, or First AME
    Church and taking knowledge from each to create a spirituality that
    encompasses your entire world.
    Finally, Global Culture is about doing what is right. From Nepal to
    Liberia, to the debate around mayoral control of L.A.'s behemoth
    school district, people around the world are hoisting up protest
    signs and banners to show their support for the suffering on our very
    streets and thousands of miles away. Global Culture is about taking
    the American democratic experiment to the next level, in every
    district, ward and borough. It is taking a few dollars at the end of
    each pay period and donating to Doctors Without Borders' work to
    eradicate tropical diseases in the sub-Sahara. It's about
    transparency and accountability, about morality. It's about enough
    really being enough.
    The cynics in Los Angeles' media community can lament the city's
    political corruption, race relations and drug trade. But I'll side
    with those who see hope in the Global Culture emerging in Los
    Angeles, a culture that fits the world we live in now; one that draws
    strength from differences, that imagines community in broader terms,
    a culture that is in sync with the world today.

    Michael DeGuzman Nobleza is a writer and life coach based in Los
    Angeles and author of the book, To Love and Grow in Love: A
    Meditation, tentatively scheduled to be self-published in the next
    year (www.alahacenter.com).
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