I have been thinking about how to decelerate or stop the storm of Globalization; is anybody can be out the range of global citizenship. The answer is suspended. It is like a storm or hurricane, sweeping every thing it passes by and converting them into a similar pattern. It’s pathetic to see that western countries give third world countries brainwash, replace their original culture and values with western ones and spread the idea of capitalism to all over the world. The variety of culture is threatened and the whole world tends to have same thoughts. With identity of global citizenship becoming increasingly noticeable, people’s identity of their own culture is somehow blurred. However, no one can be an outsider of the storm for globalization is strengthening connections among people, making us a chain. Every one can make a little difference with his or her deed no matter whether people notice or not. Even though we say that we don’t care about globalization, we all have lived under the influence of the trend.
On the international stage, developed western countries are usually the initiative side, playing the roles of subverter to assimilate others’ values into a mainstream that is accordant with them; they are the dominators of new international orders; they are the deciders of whether or not give developing countries a hand and help them out in aspect of technology, education and economy. For these powerful citizens in the world, they are supposed to support the civilization improvement and general development of backward ones; they should contribute to the harmony of world instead of making use of the irresistible of strength of globalization. As for developing countries, in order to be adaptive to the universal climate, except for being passive they should actively dedicate to absorbing the essence from other countries and insist on their core of culture while combining and balancing the exterior and domestic senses of worth.
To understand a cultural cohort or formation requires the macro-view about how culture roots into arts and nurtures every aspect of life. By art works, I mean the one that originates from the local place by local people rather than works produced by outsider, like Hollywood movies. Actually I prefer to refer to both inside and outside materials to study a kind of culture. Because each art work contains certain purpose and emotion, if see it solely from one side, the conclusion we arrive from study might not be objective. There are plenty of resources we can refer to. Take music as an example, we all acknowledge that music is a way to interpret thoughts and feelings and identify a group. The context in music, the style music is performed, the way music communicates and relates with people, can all articulate spirits, traditions, values and needs of the group. I used to consider music as a universal language for it is equal and can be shared among all the places in the world. However, now I would rather to see music as a magnet; on one hand, it attracts and brings people who hold the same faith together, making them a community and giving them a sense of belonging; on the other hand, music as a cultural interpreter can exclude voices and ideas that are not compatible with its own cohort. That is how various music style form and conflict with each other. Music can function as coherence as well as block, it all depends on how it is used and understood.
We have multiple roles every day and switch our roles any time any place, spontaneously. To be a qualified global citizen, we have a lot effort to pay. First of all, be open-minded and respectful to different culture. There is no best and worst culture and ethnics in the world, only diverse. I came to a foreign country with a little knowledge about it. Deep inside my heart is my strong attachment to my homeland and our national convention and my worry about the inability to fit in this new environment. Thanks to my nice and dear classmates and professors here, I don’t feel alienated because of my race and culture. At least, I survive so far. I have no doubt that we are all good global citizens on this point. Secondly, never see things from one side. We live in a information explosion era, we receive a great amount of news every day. Sometimes it’s more or less demanding to be critical about what we hear and see from medium. However, if we don’t spare an effort on that, we may misread many culture and issues based on a sole or exparte channel to gain the pictures of world we are not familiar with. What’s more, appreciate our present life and everything we own now for the sake of a more satisfying and pleasing life. We complain a lot about unfairness and setbacks we meet, we desire more when we are satisfied a little, we focus on what we have lost and what we don’t own, missing many beautiful moments and details around us. Compared with people in poor or third world countries, or those who are suffering from war, fights and prejudice, we are much more fortunate, we are blessed. While I am sitting in front of my computer and writing down my immature opinions about the world without worrying about what to eat and wear, there are millions of peers are in starving and poverty, unable to imagine what in store for them in the next minute, not to mention wondering what future will be like. We are far more lucky.
Taking the course of Music Identity and Global Citizenship enables to think extensively and comprehensively about music, people, culture and political issues around me. The course has successfully exceeded the range of music to sociology and anthropology, making me more aware about my identity of being a fair global citizenship.