Originally Posted by Sajal Tariq
Passage:
Culture, in human societies, has two main aspects; an external, formal aspect and an inner, ideological aspect. The external forms of culture, social or artistic, are merely an organized expression of its inner ideological aspect, and both are an inherent component of a given social structure. They are changed or modified when this structure. They are changed and modified when this structure is changed or modified and because of this organic link they also help and influence such changes in their parent organism. Cultural Problems, therefore, cannot be studied or understood or solved in isolation from social problems, i.e. problems of political and economic relationships. The cultural problems of the underdeveloped countries, therefore, have to be understood and solved in the light of larger perspective, in the context of underlying social problems. Very broadly speaking, these problems are primarily the problems of arrested growth; they originate primarily from long years of imperialist-Colonialist domination and the remnants of a backward outmoded social structure. This should not require much elaboration European Imperialism caught up with the countries of Asia, Africa or Latin America between the sixteenth and nineteenth centuries. Some of them were fairly developed feudal societies with ancient traditions of advanced feudal culture. Others had yet to progress beyond primitive pastoral tribalism. Social and cultural development of them all was frozen at the point of their political subjugation and remained frozen until the coming of political independence. The culture of these ancient feudal societies, in spite of much technical and intellectual excellence, was restricted to a small privileged class and rarely intermingled with the parallel unsophisticated folk culture of the general masses. Primitive tribal culture, in spite of its child like beauty, had little intellectual content. Both feudal and tribal societies living contagiously in the same homelands were constantly engaged in tribal, racial and religious or other feuds with their tribal and feudal rivals. Colonialist – imperialist domination accentuated this dual fragmentation, the vertical division among different tribal and national groups, the horizontal division among different classes within the same tribal or national groups. This is the basic ground structure, social and cultural, bequeathed to the newly liberated countries by their former over lords.
Word count: 362
Precis:
The two major aspects of culture, inner and external, form the basis of social structure. Cultural problems arising out of modification in social structure, necessarily needs to be understood in connection with the social problems.
These problems, primarily of arrested growth are rooted in long years of imperialist-colonialist domination and outmoded social structure.
The imperialist colonization led to a freeze on the cultural growth of both fairly developed feudal societies as well as primitive pastoral tribalism – social and economic growth, halted by political subjugation.
Given the constant rivalries between tribal and feudal societies, colonial-imperialist domination further deepened the vertical and horizontal divisions. The newly liberalized countries thus inherited such structure of a restricted and under-developed culture as a legacy of colonialism.
Title: STUNTED CULTURES- A LEGACY OF COLONIALISM
Word count: 121
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