yup! i think my teacher actually suggested it once earlier this yearOriginally posted by babydoll_
Do you guys think Erin Brockovich is ok to use as related?
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yup! i think my teacher actually suggested it once earlier this yearOriginally posted by babydoll_
Do you guys think Erin Brockovich is ok to use as related?
but then again, you can question why people embrace the global, or its 'good' qualities.Originally posted by ~k8t~
RTFG for our class was viewed as rejecting post-modernism towards something more towards a 'liberal humanist and conservative notion.'
errr havent heard of heidegger, but fukuyama is a jap professor or something who accepts globalisation.Originally posted by SMKOD
Whats this about referring to thinkers like fukuyama, heidegger, etc.? This is the first i've heard of them and the first time someone has told me we should include that sorta stuff. Anyone care to explain that to me?
I agree that the whole things kinda intertwined, i mean 1 persons local is anothers global and vica versa... but as a definition for seperating and comparing retreat and the global i usually have global- post modernism vs. local - liberal humanism kinda thing.Originally posted by Rahul
but then again, you can question why people embrace the global, or its 'good' qualities.
also you would need to look at a 'glocal' scenario, where people embrace a bit of both. most characters do, so you can even question whether you can totally retreat
I haven't read any of his works, but Heidigger was a 20th century phenomenological (Philosophy of experience) thinker..Originally posted by babydoll_
errr havent heard of heidegger, but fukuyama is a jap professor or something who accepts globalisation.
did anyone watch "Dancer in the Dark" the other day? does it seem RFTG to you?