Friday, February 15, 2019
Cultural Anthropology Book Report Essay -- essays research papers
Classical Readings on pagan AnthropologyWhat do we sustain to learn through the study of different socialisations? I was hoping for some wonderful revelation in the collection of writings. I may have found iodin. This book was a difficult read for me. I am not sure whether its my age or my inexperience with classical exercises. I also found it difficult to formulate a report on a collection of readings, the last report I did was on Laura Ingalls Little House on the Prairie. This reading was a little more challenging. The main point that faceed to jump tabu at me is that perceptions change, our theory of reality changes with every viewpoint. Every culture can seem primitive, self destructive, nonsensical, immoral or just wrong, depending on who is doing the observation and what positioning they be observing from.In the first reading, Narcirema, points very clearly to the detail that our induce culture could seem very odd, irrational, and ritualistic to an outsider. But arent we all outsiders to everyone else? Dont we see ourselves as normal and everyone else as abnormal? I think it is human nature more than ethnocentrism. My chance(a) rituals would seem very irrational to another woman of my age in different circumstances. Thats where the saying comes from that you dont really dwell a person till you laissez passer a mile in their shoes.The second reading of Queer Customs gets right to my point that culture is an abstraction therefore each person doing the viewing views it differently. Culture is pointed out as being a way of thinking, feeling, and believing and since I have never met anyone who thought exactly the way I did about everything, one would have to conclude that we each have our own culture and our own views of other cultures.I wasnt really sure that the next reading really fit in with the others in the book. Rapport-talk versus Report-talk seemed insignificant to the other passages. It is a well-known fact, in all walks of life th at men and women of any race, creed, or culture are different and that we have different and sometimes distinguish ways of communicating with each other. I was surprised to find this evidently wide theory in this book. Yet again back to my headway am I getting the intended message from the author?The Christmas Ox story made so much more sense to me and had colossal importance when I read the passage on Potlach.... ...tely cause the decease of the entire culture. Sharps and Bodleys detailed description of simple helpful actions that have generational, historical implications are dramatic and still, and maybe nonetheless more so, relevant to modern cultural diffusion. We dont a lot think critically about our efforts to help others. We just dive in and fix things, this seems to come with the thinking that we know better than they do. This is a common problem in todays governments around the world. This is the impression of ethnocentrism. This book has certainly taught me one t hing. American culture is very ethnocentric. Ours is one that is a nightmare to navigate the good and the bad because there are so many double standards. I think this speaks to the very nerve of contention among Americans these days. Very few of our leaders do what is right, and each of us has our own definition of right. Maybe if more people could really walk outside of their own daily rituals, beliefs, habits and commandments, and truly look at human kind without a superiority gauge, then the world would be a better place with less war, less suffering, less judgment and more peace, happiness, success, and creativity.
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