An Abstract
of
Cultural Literacy: Reclaiming Self-Esteem and Intellectual Freedom or Innovation
of
Cultural Literacy: Reclaiming Self-Esteem and Intellectual Freedom or Innovation
The Cases of India and China
(First presented in 2002 and slightly revised in February 2014)
Mohan R.
Limaye
Professor Emeritus
College of Business and Economics
Boise State University
One observes that most
developing nations and non-privileged cultures are currently employing
Western models of management in their corporations and primarily U.S.-authored
textbooks in their universities. This
wholesale borrowing by emerging countries has resulted in at least two damaging phenomena: (1) a total disconnect between the English-educated elites and the commoners and (2) imitative
or secondhand research coming out of these developing countries. We can see these lamentable results, for instance, in India. This presentation asserts that, only by
“going to the roots” and re-investigating the thinkers of the past, the
teacher-researchers and business-people from these developing countries will
reclaim their self-respect and intellectual autonomy. This new emancipation is the need of the
hour.
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