How adaptable is Indian culture to globalization and westernization?
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Globalization is the word used to describe the growing interdependence of the world’s economies, cultures, and populations, brought about by cross-border trade in goods and services, technology, and flows of investment, people, and information. Westernisation is a process whereby societies adopt western cultural practices, whether through compulsion or influence. With this cultural assimilation, the entire lifestyle of people in different societies is changing to a new pattern. Influences of global and western cultures are making inroads into Indian culture as well.
How Westernisation And Globalisation Changed Indian Culture
In today’s era, the various means of telecommunication, social media, and most importantly the Internet has a big role to play in the spread of westernisation and globalization.
Positive Changes
Negative Changes
Resilience Of Indian Culture
Globalisation and westernisation are not new phenomena occurring for the first time on the face of the earth. It is a continuous process in which societies and cultures of the world interact and affect each other. Recently, due to rapid physical and virtual connectivity, this pace of interaction and influence has increased. The resilience of Indian culture is evident from the fact that many civilisations emerged on the face of the earth and vanished, but the essence of Indus valley civilisation and the Vedic era spirituality is still alive in India. This implies that Indian culture always welcomed other cultures but never lost its original identity.