Introduction
The postmodern theory clearly explains the hardships and at times most treacherous terrains of modern critical theories about how it can be done and explains more about itself. The theory explores the in-depth discourses pertaining writers and intensively brings out their most admirable insights and clarity. Unlike the common knowledge the readers have of understanding postmodernism to always have a connection to the political flights, its proves them fully wrong by doing the contrary of that by bringing back one of the most important aspect of theoretical enterprise again into the political moorings which is not an easy goal to achieve. The book, “Postmodern theory by Steven Best and Douglas Kellner contains some of the most detailed theory introductions that entail the postmodern social theories ever seen in history. The book is loaded with the most valuable critical readings that entail the major debates in the social world (Kellner, 45).
Racism can be defined generally as the main acts that individuals from a specific community and their main practices and beliefs which might do consider the fact that the people’s species to be divided into forms of races that involve sharing of similar traits and beneficial abilities and qualities. Types of these characteristics involve example such as personality, personal intellect, the individuals morality and any other cultural behavioral feature especially the intercommunity belief that races can be ranked as in terms of the inherently more powerful or on the other hand are inferior to others, while others claim that the members of a different race must be treated differently and with more courtesy (Hassan, 69).
Ethnicity during the industrial and postindustrial periods can be defined as the population that comprised of human beings in a given community of whose members do identify with each other in one way or the other on the basements of a normal or a relatively presumed similar ancestry or genealogy. Membership belonging to ethnic community will always tends to be sharing the same characteristics as those of shared cultural heritage, dialect language, similar ideology, a rich history, and also containing a list of a rather symbolic systems which might involve examples such as religion the tribes’ mythology and ritual, the individuals dressing style and the overall physical appearance (Best, 113).
The postmodern theory has played relatively huge role in promotion of peace and unity in the different ethnic groups around the globe. The theory helps build multinational structures that unit every type of citizen nevertheless of their ethnicity or in other words their sources of origin.
In Steven’s book ewe can find different ethnical clans sharing the same resources as though not a mare difference was there between them. The theory also helps in increasing the rate of economic growth through which every citizen works effectively and efficiently towards achieving the economic targets of the country as the results will benefit every individual in the country (Hassan, 203). On the same note, the postmodern theory highly contributes to the reduction of both the ethnicity and the racism pullbacks in the society bearing to the fact that the increased usage of e-learning, marketing and also electronic business, leads to unlimited interaction of individuals from all over the world.
Peace promoting programs have been formed through the internet to encourage the reduction of racism and the effect of divisibility among tribes from the influence of ethnicity. Adding to this point is the fact that post modernisation leads to the incremental growth of the spread of education from the fact that the learners can share the contents through the web and can also freely attend to online lectures which does not only improve their performance but also increases their general knowledge (Best, 391).
Works cited
Best, Steven, and Douglas Kellner. Postmodern Theory: Critical Interrogations. New York: Guilford Press, 1991. Print.
Hassan, Ihab H. The Postmodern Turn: Essays in Postmodern Theory and Culture. Columbus: Ohio State University Press, 1987. Print.
Kellner, Douglas. Postmodernism: Jameson Critique. Washington, D.C: Maisonneuve Press, 1989. Print.