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The globalization of nothing / George Ritzer.

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: Thousand Oaks, Calif. ; Pine Forge, 2004.Description: xvii, 259 p. ; 23 cmISBN:
  • 0761988076
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 303.482 RIT
Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode
Standard Loan Moylish Library Main Collection 303.482 RIT (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available 39002000379926

Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:

In a world increasingly festooned with familiar logos - from the hallmark swoosh on a designer tennis shoe to the famous golden arches outside a fast-food chain - it is clear that these symbols are not merely decorative, but represent shifts in our social milieu. More specifically, the proliferation of such items as credit card offers, automated banking services, and globally recognizable brand names illustrate significant changes in the realm of social consumption: a trajectory toward a world of increasingly dehumanized services and meaningless places and things.

George Ritzer theorizes in his provocative new book, The Globalization of Nothing , that the "grand narrative" or social story of this period is a movement from "something" to "nothing." Extending his renowned McDonaldization thesis, Ritzer contends that societies around the globe continue to move away from "something," defined as a social form that is generally indigenously conceived, locally controlled, and rich in distinctive content, toward "nothing" - that which is centrally controlled and conceived and relatively devoid of substance. It is in the movement toward the globalization of "nothing" that "something" is lost. More than likely, that "something" is an indigenous custom, a local store, a familiar gathering place, or simply personalized interaction.

The Globalization of Nothing takes the subject of globalization in new directions, introducing terms such as "grobalization." The key conflict in the world today is viewed as that between the grobalization of nothing and the glocalization of something. This book is structured around four organizing concepts addressing this issue: "non-places," "non-things," "non-people," and "non-services." By drawing upon salient examples from everyday life, George Ritzer invites the reader to examine the nuances of these concepts in conjunction with the paradoxes within the process of the globalization of nothing. Why is it that those who produce "nothing" for major multinational corporations often cannot afford that which they produce? Why do some people seem to be enraptured with their favorite brands or with their credit cards? What are the social implications of the increasing "globalization of nothing" for the medical, education, and tourism industries? Critical questions are raised throughout the book and the reader is compelled not only to seek answers to these questions, but to critically evaluate the questions as well as the answers they themselves conceive.

The Globalization of Nothing is ideal as a text for courses in sociology, anthropology, communication, business, and related disciplines. This book is also recommended for anyone interested in the critical study of contemporary social phenomona.

Click on ′Additional Materials′ to read sample chapters.

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Table of contents provided by Syndetics

  • About the Author
  • Preface
  • 1 Globalization: A New Conceptualization
  • Key Topics in the Study of Globalization
  • Globalization Theories
  • Glocalization and Grobalization
  • Grobalization: The Major Processes
  • Glocal, Grobal, and Local
  • 2 Nothing (and Something): Another New Conceptualization
  • Defining Nothing
  • Defining Something
  • The Something-Nothing Continuum
  • Globalization and the Dimensions of Nothing
  • 3 Meet the Nullities: Nonplaces, Nonthings, Nonpeople, and Nonservices
  • Nonplaces (and Places)
  • Nonthings (and Things)
  • Nonpeople (and People)
  • Nonservice (and Service)
  • Relationships Among the Nullities
  • An Illustrative Excursion to the Movies
  • 4 Nothing: Caveats and Clarifications
  • Conceptual Aids to Understanding Nothing
  • Some Paradoxes
  • The Social Construction of Nothing
  • The Economics of Nothing (and Something)
  • In Defense of Nothing
  • 5 The Globalization of Nothing
  • Elective Affinities
  • Grobalization: Loose Cultural and Tight Structural Forms
  • The Grobalization of Nothing: Enabling Factors
  • 6 Theorizing Glocalization and Grobalization
  • Theorizing the Globalization of Culture
  • Analyzing Sport: Use and Abuse of the Concept of Glocalization
  • Analyzing McDonaldization Anthropologically: More Use and Abuse of Glocalization
  • Thinking About the Fate of the Local
  • Contributions to Cultural Theories of Globalization
  • 7 The Globalization of Consumer Culture---and Global Opposition to It
  • Elements of Consumer Culture
  • Driving Forces Behind the Globalization of Consumer Culture
  • The Role of Branding
  • Beyond the Usual "Consumer" Suspects
  • Global Attacks on the Symbols of American Consumer Culture
  • The Globalization of Nothing and September 11, 2001
  • 8 Loss Amidst Monumental Abundance---and Global Strategies for Coping With It
  • Theory and the Paradoxes of Consumer Culture
  • Loss Amidst Monumental Abundance
  • Strategies for Overcoming the Sense of Loss
  • Notes
  • Index

Author notes provided by Syndetics

George Ritzer is Distinguished University Professor at the University of Maryland, where he has also been a Distinguished Scholar-Teacher and won a Teaching Excellence Award. He has also won a Distinguished Contributions to Teaching Award from the American Sociological Association

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