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Based on culture as a complex system of rules it is too obvious
that each rule has a particular range which is only exceptionally
congruent with national or natural borders. In general, cultural
exchange is not limited by political borders or rivers, forests,
seas, or mountains. Those areas are rather transcultural, which is
especially true for markets and towns. Dealing with cities like
Buenos Aires or Riga, regions like Podlachia (Poland), Northern
Ireland, or Bukovina, and the area of the Danube river the case
studies give evidence for this thesis.
The so-called nation states have created ethnical minorities. Also
due to migration, cultural diversity is the reality. The
multicultural society is strongly reproduced in the schools all
over Europe. Cultural diversity in the classroom is increasingly
recognized as a potential which should not be neglected. The
educational system has, above all, to provide all children with
equal opportunities. Experts from Finland, the UK, Hungary, Spain,
Greece, Cyprus, and other European states, mostly responsible for
teacher education, have contributed to this volume with critical,
but constructive remarks on the classroom reality in their
countries.
1. 2 Culture and Identity in a Postmodern World Michel Foucault's
statement that: "The present epoch will perhaps be above all the
epoch of space. We are in the epoch of simultaneity; we are in the
epoch of juxtaposition" (M. Foucault 1986: 22) heralded a new
approach to identity in the contemporary world by suggesting that
one's identity is formed not as a result of the cultural and
national values and history one has inherited, but rather as a
result of the different spaces through which one travels. In other
words, one's identity is no longer perceived as an inherited
construct but rather as something flexible that changes as one
moves through the more fluid spaces of the contemporary, globalized
world and internalizes a mixture of the different cultures and
ideas that one encounters. The idealized contemporary traveller
will thus effortlessly cross national and cultural borders and
negotiate a constantly changing and flexible identity for himself.
Andy Bennett argues that it is no longer even possible to conceive
of identity as a static entity, forged from a communal history and
value system, because all of the traditional certainties on which
identity formation were based in the past have been fatally
undermined by a postmodernist flux and fluidity: "Once clearly
demarcated by relatively static and ethnically homogenous
communities, the 'spaces' and 'places' of everyday life are now
highly pluralistic and contested, and are constantly being defined
and redefined through processes of relocation and cultural
hybridisation" (A.
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