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(2) In the last two decades of the twentieth centurym more than ever before, people in countries all over the world began to worry about the emergence of a global economy and a global culture. ..... Rapid technological change, the impact of mass communications, rampant consumerism, and the decline of national languages and identities -- all previously seenas the products of America's cultural imperialism -- were now regarded less as the fault of the United States than as the result of international trends beyond the control of governments everywhere, including the one in Washington.
――静岡県立大学 前期日程 国際関係学部(2月25日実施)――98年
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