文档介绍:本科毕业论文(设计)
外文翻译
原文:The Rise of Enterprise Culture and Enterprise Education
A notable feature of the early 1990s was the way in which the emphasis on the
introduction of the new technologies has given way to a more general discourse that
represents issues of economic and institutional reform in cultural terms (Keat and
Abercrombie, 1991). In the case of Britain, questions of national economic survival
petition in the world economy came increasingly to be seen under the Conservative governments of Margaret Thatcher and John Major as questions of cultural reconstruction. According to Keat and Abercrombie, the idea of an
enterprise culture ‘emerged as a central motif in the political thought and practice of the government’(1991, 1). The task of constructing such a culture has involved remodelling institutions mercial lines and encouraging the acquisition anduse of enterprising qualities. Keat and Abercrombie see the ideological function of the political rhetoric of enterprise as a particular interpretation for making sense of the kind of economic and cultural changes that have been described under the banners of postindustrialism, the information society, postmodernism, and post-Fordism.
Morris (1991) traces the genesis and development of the concept of enterprise from its beginnings in the thinking of the Centre for Policy Studies in the link between Christianity and