For Edward Said (1993), ‘differences’ indirectly serve as a basis for cultural domination. This can be linked with cultural homogenisation, Westernisation and Americanisation, but there are significant limits to this thesis. One argument against it states that it is capitalism that is becoming globalised, instead of the culture itself (Holton, 2011).
This argument suggests that the globalisation of capitals effects in “global interchange and partial convergence towards similar types of business organisation and economic culture” (Holton, 2011: 198). This in turn, further leads to the suggestion that the components of this process are not the sole product of one national source, despite certain disproportionate influences in particular markets and sectors, for example, the dominance of the USA or certain American symbols in particular markets such as fast food and youth culture (Holton, 2011). In other words, there is no single dominant centre, only an influential one. Holton also explains that standardised global supply simply cannot manipulate world markets. This view ultimately explains that the global field is multi-centred rather than dominated by a single centre—this can be applied in the cultural domain as well as elsewhere (Holton,