...In the late 1800s and early 1900s is the period known as imperialism. Imperialism is when a country uses another country’s resources for their own gain. Many examples can be found in The Last Samurai in the global level, local level, and personal level. Global is pertaining to the whole world. Local is pertaining to a city, town, or small district rather than an entire state or country. Personal is pertaining to own self-opinion and viewpoint. There are many ways that The Last Samurai offers lessons on a global level. At first, Nathan Algren thinks that Japanese are savages, because they have a strict policy that commanded you kill yourself if you break it. Also, he thinks that he is better than other people just because he is an American. For example, he aggressively killed several Samurai which leads to Katsumoto’s brother in law prepares to kill the wounded Nathan. But he seizes a spear from the ground and stabs Hirotaro through the throat....
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...The scene started off with a man by the name of Capt. Nathan Algren (Tom Cruise) laying on a floor wearing dirty garments and yelling out the name of a man that he had just killed before his capture. The Captain was captured during a fight between the Americans and the Japanese, but instead of killing the American, the Samurai leader Katsumoto (Ken Wantanobe) wanted him alive so that he could learn from his enemy's ways. The Captain was staying in Katsumoto's ex brother-in-law's house with the now widowed young lady and her children. The lady was very un-accepting of the war hero at first, because he was the man who killed her husband, but as the story grew, she, along with the rest of her Buddhist tribe grew to like the American. As the American got stronger and was given more rights by their tribe, he started to learn the art of Japanese language and symbolism. While he was learning the semantics of another culture, I noticed that he had completely forgotten his ways as an American soldier and instead, took on the way of the Samurai. As the ways of the Samurai embodied him, he grew emotionally and spiritually enough to the point of complete change of being. He was now willing to fight for the Samurais, and although they did not have all the weapons that the Americans possessed, they did have much more structure of discipline and self control. The clip ends with the American apologizing to the young lady for the slaying of her husband. She accepts, and then tells him in Japanese...
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...Globalization is a process of material and intellectual products breaking regional boundaries to influence everyone on earth. It also includes high level personnel trans-border flow. People are connected across the world by business and communication, so business and communication make the world smaller. Globalization brings about the developing of business and more communication. In the present age, business has been extended to over the world. Transnational corporations are products of globalization. Corporations are small groups who have the power to decide how to run their companies and influence other people. This group works together to serve many kinds of objectives. Corporations wish to be seen just like a normal person. For example, a kind old man, or young, energetic and outgoing. “Everyone believes the corporations have their own belief and politics.” (Achba and Abbott 2004) The modern corporation has come from the old industrial age. “The modern corporation has grown out of the industrial age. The industrial age began in 1712 with an Englishman named Thomas Newcomen invented a steam driven pump to pump water out of English coalmine, so the English coalminers could get more coal to mine rather than hauling buckets of water out of the mine.” (Achba and Abbott 2004) Because this steam driven pump was invented, productivity improved. Each worker could make more steel, more textiles and more automobiles per hour. Now, corporations’ systems are mainly the same, producing...
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