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  • 1.  How Globalization Helped Create Thanksgiving Day

    Posted 11-24-2016 02:31

    As Americans sit down to their Thanksgiving Day feasts, some may recall the story of the "Pilgrim Fathers" who founded one of the first English settlements in North America in 1620, at what is today the town of Plymouth, Massachusetts.

    What many Americans don't realize, however, is that the early settlers, half of whom had died, and the rest starving and shivering in the New England winter, were saved by an English-speaking Patuxet Indian who had returned from Europe after a six-year journey.  The settlers' survival, which culminated in what we remember today as the first Thanksgiving feast, is a tale of globalization, many centuries before the word was even coined. And the turkey on Thanksgiving tables may not be a bird native to the U.S. but is more likely a bird of Mexican origin taken by the Spanish to Europe and (re)imported back to North America.

    As Americans enjoy their repast, enquiring minds may wish to read my post at The Conversation https://theconversation.com/why-we-have-globalization-to-thank-for-thanksgiving-68638

    Some understanding of globalization's history may help those who attack it consider the historical long-term inevitability of the official motto of the United States (appearing on its Great Seal): "E Pluribus Unum."

    Farok J. Contractor, Ph.D.
    DISTINGUISHED PROFESSOR
    Management & Global Business 
    Rutgers Business School
    1 Washington Park
    Newark, New Jersey 07102-1897, USA
    farok@andromeda.rutgers.edu

    WEB PAGES:
    http://GlobalBusiness.me (Unbiased Perspectives on Global Business Issues)

    http://www.business.rutgers.edu/faculty-research/directory/contractor-farok

     



  • 2.  How Globalization Helped Create Thanksgiving Day

    Posted 11-24-2016 06:16
    We can all be thankful that the turkey made its way from Mexico to Plymouth via Europe and not that other favorite Aztec dish, hairless dog! 

    Carolyn Erdener

    On Thu, Nov 24, 2016 at 1:30 PM, Prof. Farok J. Contractor <fjcontractor@embarqmail.com> wrote:

    As Americans sit down to their Thanksgiving Day feasts, some may recall the story of the "Pilgrim Fathers" who founded one of the first English settlements in North America in 1620, at what is today the town of Plymouth, Massachusetts.

    What many Americans don't realize, however, is that the early settlers, half of whom had died, and the rest starving and shivering in the New England winter, were saved by an English-speaking Patuxet Indian who had returned from Europe after a six-year journey.  The settlers' survival, which culminated in what we remember today as the first Thanksgiving feast, is a tale of globalization, many centuries before the word was even coined. And the turkey on Thanksgiving tables may not be a bird native to the U.S. but is more likely a bird of Mexican origin taken by the Spanish to Europe and (re)imported back to North America.

    As Americans enjoy their repast, enquiring minds may wish to read my post at The Conversation https://theconversation.com/why-we-have-globalization-to-thank-for-thanksgiving-68638

    Some understanding of globalization's history may help those who attack it consider the historical long-term inevitability of the official motto of the United States (appearing on its Great Seal): "E Pluribus Unum."

    Farok J. Contractor, Ph.D.
    DISTINGUISHED PROFESSOR
    Management & Global Business 
    Rutgers Business School
    1 Washington Park
    Newark, New Jersey 07102-1897, USA
    farok@andromeda.rutgers.edu

    WEB PAGES:
    http://GlobalBusiness.me (Unbiased Perspectives on Global Business Issues)

    http://www.business.rutgers.edu/faculty-research/directory/contractor-farok