Allison Terlizzi
The
readings for this week focused on the role of the media in cultural
globalization. Does the media reinforce societal norms, beliefs and values or
reflect them in their depiction of social behavior? Class status and behavior
in regards to the globalized world were most concentrated on as seen in the
movie, Lagaan and “The Maasai and the
Lion King”. The media plays a large role in shaping our behavior, and in a
globalized world it can lead to drastic changes in other countries.
In
the article by Florian Stadler, “Lagaan and its Audience Responses”, fusion
projects like Lagaan have increasingly adopted a broad appeal (Stadler, 517).
South Asian influences have been penetrating mainstream culture more and more.
Bollywood has already dominated Asia, so it is no shock that this film got wide
recognition. Laagan depicts is an
everyday peasant’s heroism and the battle between the underdog with limited
resources to compete against the tyrannical ruler who has unlimited wealth and
resources to win. It gained global appeal because of its inspirational message.
It is no surprise that a film with a historical setting can be recognized on
global level. While many of us in class thought it was corny, probably because
we are used to these themes presented much differently than in a game of
cricket, we weren’t aware of its global effect. While none of us knew how to
play cricket, we could all relate to the underdog and love triangle themes,
showing this film does have potential to be global. Does the West determine what
films are worthy of being globalized? Did Bollywood “sell out” by making films
like Lagaan that have Western
appeal?
The
global appeal of the Kenyan Maasai has inspired a large tourism industry to
arise. In “The Maasai and the Lion King”, Edward M. Bruner sets out to expose
how the Maasai are exhibited- or put on display for tourists- through their
meanings, ironies and ambiguities in tourist performances (Bruner, 882). He
says there is a big difference between domestic and foreign tourism and there
has been a wide-ranging impact of globalization on tourism and he shows this in
Kenya by looking into three tourism sites with Maasai men (Bruner, 882). The
warriors on Mayer’s Ranch were hired to build a Maasai manyatta for young warriors who would perform their dances
and enact aspects of their culture for tourists, but then tourists would go to
lawn for tea and crumpets (Bruner, 883). There exists a contrast between wild
and civilized. What the Mayers wanted to depict was “tourist realism”,
immersing their tourists in a real experience, even providing them with
authentic souveniers (885). Mayers is an example of imperialist nostalgia, or
as Bruner describes, the contemporary western peoples yearn for the traditional
cultures that have been destroyed, reliving through the actual performance and
reenactment (886). What this makes me think of is a performance of domination
that makes the actors feel and play their roles. The tourists play the wealthy
and the Maasai play the natives put forth for the pleasure of the rich. What
example in modern day America do we see similar roles being played?
In
the next location, the Bomas of Kenya are a government museum of the performing
arts, present the cultural heritage of a nation by professional dance troupe
who are government employees (Bruner, 886). The purpose was to preserve Kenyan
cultural heritage in education. Bomas detaches culture from tribe as displays
as a way for all to see and share, as an example of national wish fulfillment
(Bruner, 890). Out of Africa Sundowner was the final group who specialized in
game viewing from safari vehicles. There was no separation between Maasai and
tourists but only one performing space (Bruner, 892). The thing I found most
fascinating about these locations was in the responses from the tourists, who
encounter American cultural content that represents an American image of
African culture, leading them to feel comfortable and safe. Because they feel
safe, they can express their privilege status, such as in the Mayers case. I am
left wondering, which location provides the most authentic and realistic
experience? Are any of them authentic at all?
In
“Brazil’s Girl Power”, by Cynthia Gorney, she writes about the decline in birth
rate in Brazil across all class statuses due to changing attitudes of women in
recent decades. Women are now having sterilization surgeries because they think
children are impossible and expensive. The government has also probably played
a role in deterring them from having kids as well, with surgeries and birth control
and the media has also played a role through the “aspirational image” of
Brazilian families on television. What women believe today is that material
acquisition is more important- the fewer kids they have the more stuff they
have. The media has also affected eating behaviors in Fiji as shown in Anne E.
Becker’s article, “Eating Behaviors and Attitudes Following Prolonged Exposure
to Television Among Fiji Adolescent Girls”. She does a study in a country where
there was no pressure to be slim (as only one reported case of anorexia has
been recorded), and after the introduction of television, 83% of girls
responded that they felt television had influenced them to change their body
shape/weight. In this way television allows them to think they are engaging in
a Western lifestyle by giving them the image of what a Western body “looks
like”. We all known most Western women do not look like most women on TV, so
this is ultimately giving Fijian women a false reality.
The
media can have drastic implications on culture as seen in the previous
examples. The last article discusses a reinforcement of American culture in
“Watching Dallas” by Tomlinson. He discusses a show that has become the symbol
of American cultural imperialism. It is one example in the media that is a
reinforcement of the audience’s own cultural values, depicted in the issues of
interpersonal and sexual morality. Most importantly the program’s celebration
of wealth defines what it is to be American and pursuer capitalism. We all are
programmed to want more money. We are brought up as capitalists and as
consumers who need “stuff” to make us happy. Not only can the media shape the
Western image, but it can shape the image of other countries based on a
falsified Western image.
There is so much to talk about this week. I think the sense of privilege that the international tourists take with them to places like Kenya is an interesting observation that the tourism business seems to have fed into. They obviously want their guests to feel they spent their money wisely, even it means presenting their culture in a way that does not entirely hold true or revealing everything that is going on in the country. This sense of privilege that is kept secure by these tourist agencies also becomes something that others want to obtain. As the article on Dallas discuses, consumerism has become a term to define American culture, even thought the reality is that many people in American cannot obtain very privileged lives, at least to the same degree as many think we are living.
ReplyDeleteI liked the question that you posed about what we have in America that is similar to these Maasai performances. I think the closest that we have to something like that, is colonial Williamsburg or other colonial/civil war era reenactments. But these are most like the Bomas, in that they try to keep the tradition alive and are targeted to domestic tourists. I think this is a result of our multicultural heritage (which Kenya also has) and our privilege as Americans. We don't cater to anyone else.
ReplyDeleteI completely agree with the stuff about tourism. I think the problem that stems from this mentality of tourists is everything become sensationalized. When people go on vacation they want to see the most overt displays of difference between their reality and their new situation. People begin to feel like their experience was deficient if it does not meet and surpass their expectation and assumptions of the society in which they are tourists. Instead of consuming accurate portrayals of others' lives a fake performance is put on purely based on entertainment and not actuality. Identities across the world will become more based on entertainment then fact.
ReplyDeleteGreg Demetriou
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