Globalization theorists predict that the forces of globalization
will divide the countries of the world into a few winners and many
losers. This book challenges that idea and suggests that the very
margins of the global world system--where the construction of local
relations and group identities within a deterritorialized,
transnational political economy allows for a creative
postmodernism--may become the areas of the most creative cultural
activity. The difficulties facing those who are globalizing in the
margins come from powerful transnational movements such as the
environmental movement, the international drug trade, and
migrations of people including international tourists. Ironically,
instant contact with the rest of the world has created a sense of
local identity that transcends the local and is truly
multicultural.
Belize is a diverse, multicultural society that is both
cosmopolitan and deterritorialized, searching for new forms of
collective expression, identity, and imagined possibilities, coming
into its own as a nation at a time of increasing awareness of
global social realities. Perhaps the rreatest challenge faced by
Belizeans is the power of the transnational eco-colonialists who
have, with missionary zeal, garnered control of land and resources
and placed themselves in positions of political power. The present
is an end of history for Belize and the beginning of a new era, one
that is peculiarly postmodern, globalized, and creative.
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