Identity and Alterity: The Post-Colonial Structure of Civilizations

Authors

  • Sarveen Kaur Sachdeva, Dr. Rakesh Gupta, Dr. Pragya Mishra

Abstract

Many contemporary language and personality tests revolve around the demonstration of speaker communication or self-expression. This approach simplifies speaker, exhibition, sound, and self-adjustment. This basic exposition asserts that personality has become an unanalyzed first criterion for semantic analysis, which has impeded or absorbed other similarly important parts of speech works, including changing exhibitions. Indeed, the government's personality issues are now firmly and unambiguously placed on international relations plans. The situation in the Balkans, Africa, the Middle East, and Asia is gradually drawing attention to how important the Internet sees itself and others. This enthusiasm for personality and world legislative issues often focuses on national and ethnic characteristics. Through relevance, the idea of a person's progressive personality may seem trivial, even if it is not outdated, at this level, it can also be introduced through personality queries, which is too broad and truly from the everyday existence and government issues.

Downloads

Published

2021-06-27

How to Cite

Sarveen Kaur Sachdeva, Dr. Rakesh Gupta, Dr. Pragya Mishra. (2021). Identity and Alterity: The Post-Colonial Structure of Civilizations. International Journal of Modern Agriculture, 9(4), 1546 - 1553. Retrieved from https://modern-journals.com/index.php/ijma/article/view/1351

Issue

Section

Articles