Western European culture is seen as more "civilised" and representing "universal values" etc, whereas other cultures are seen as "provincial" and "primitive", even in places like Japan that were never colonised. The reason it is seen that way is because of a centuries-long advertisement campaign that intensified after 1945 and positioned "the West" specifically in opposition to communism, the Soviet Union and the People's Republic of China. This is also why Japanese institutions and elites took up the cause of Western European culture so wholeheartedly; the USSR and the PRC represented countries that had long been a threat to Japan, and communism specifically represented a threat to those institutions and elites because it had a good chance of taking away their wealth.
(Of course, the USSR and the PRC themselves retooled some forms of Western European culture into "socialist realism" in part because this advertisement campaign had started long before they came into existence, so the situation is more complex & nuanced than I've suggested, but it always on some level does come down to a "colonisation of the mind".)
(Of course, the USSR and the PRC themselves retooled some forms of Western European culture into "socialist realism" in part because this advertisement campaign had started long before they came into existence, so the situation is more complex & nuanced than I've suggested, but it always on some level does come down to a "colonisation of the mind".)
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