Using Yoruba culture and other African cultures as examples, Cultural Globalization and Plurality presents plurality and globalisation concepts from an African perspective. From discourses on New World and 21st century migration, trans-nationalism and slavery, to issues of identity and African Islamic cultural performances, it adopts discourse methodology that is rooted in both African cultural rhetoric and Western analytical traditions. It also discusses day-to-day issues such as travel, exile and the search for cultural acceptance in a new society.