Order Number |
543889234 |
Type of Project |
ESSAY |
Writer Level |
PHD VERIFIED |
Format |
APA |
Academic Sources |
10 |
Page Count |
3-12 PAGES |
Extra Credit
12-5-21
Extra-Credit Assignment # 1
Samburu and Mosuo Matriarchies: A Comparison #1
The Samburu – The Land of No Men: Inside
Kenya’s Women-Only Village (Part of the Broadly Video Series) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UrnmBLB-UX4
The Women’s Kingdom, regarding the Mosuo, as seen in the PBS Frontline Series (Cut and paste URL)
This assignment and the next ask you to compare and contrast Samburu and Mosuo culture. To earn 1 point Extra-Credit in this assignment, answer the following five questions in a full single page with standard margins, single-spaced, using 12-font. For any specific evidence you cite to back up your points, include the video time markers.
Extra-Credit Assignment # 2
Samburu and Mosuo Matriarchies: A Comparison #2
For this assignment, please refer to the two videos on the Mosuo and the Samburu to which the first extra-credit assignment referred. Similar to the first extra-credit assignment, this one asks you about Samburu and Mosuo culture, but here the emphasis is on their political levels and several other points. To earn 1 point Extra-Credit, address the following four issues in a full single page with normal margins, single-spaced, and using 12-font. For any specific evidence you cite to back up your points, include the video time markers.
Extra-Credit Assignment # 3
How Cultures Are Studied
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=72oSUzZT2sU
How Cultures Are Studied documents the field research of Napoleon Chagnon among the Yanomama people of Brazil and Venezuela. This video records the type of ethnography that anthropologists did in remote parts of the world, a type of study that is increasingly rare in our globalizing world.
To earn 1 point Extra-Credit, address the following two issues in a full single page, single-spaced, essay using 12-font. For any specific evidence you cite to back up your points, include the video time markers.
1) Write a half-page summary of the events of the video.
2) In the second half of the same page (in a single-spaced paragraph or two), discuss Chagnon’s field research methods. The essential question I want you to address in the second half of the page is, Did Chagnon carry out participant observation as effectively as he might have?
Among the things should consider in the second half of this assignment are:
—As depicted in the film, did Chagnon make use of Life Histories? If he didn’t, why do you think he didn’t? Whatever your answer, is this a negative or a positive in this specific case.
—Do you think Chagnon left himself open to the possibility of distortion of his data as the result of the Hawthorne Effect? (Explain.)
—Were Chagnon’s informants mostly men or women, young or old, or mostly from one village? As you consider these questions, discuss whether there is bias of any type in his field study.
—Did either the Yanomama or Chagnon show signs of ethnocentrism, culture shock, or naïve realism? If so, explain and reference the specific points (with a time marker)
—Chagnon recorded Yanomama myths – why was this important? What do myths tell us about a culture?
Extra-Credit Assignment # 4
Documentary Video: Updating Kula
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8LPICjAP0zo
The documentary video, Updating Kula is about the traditional system of exchange called Kula among the Trobriand Islanders (or, “Trobrianders”) of the South Pacific, about whom you read in your textbook. The film documents traditional exchange in items that have no intrinsic value. In other words, these items, which are in some instances very old necklaces and armbands, cannot serve as food, they do not function as tools, they are not medicine, nor do they provide protection or shelter. They nevertheless have great value as items of beauty and elements of social life, including functioning to provide a cultural connection between distant peoples in the Islands and as a means for gaining prestige through ownership and exchange.
For this extra-credit assignment, in a discussion of one page, single-spaced (12-font), with normal margins, consider ten common items in western culture that have no or limited intrinsic value, but nevertheless have great value in our consumerist culture. For each item, describe any practical value it might have and estimate how much of its value is non-practical (or non-intrinsic). Finally, for each item you list, explain why people are willing to spend money on it. How does it function in our culture? What does it do for people?
Take as a hypothetical example, a $5000 imported gold watch, which does tell time, but no better than a $50 watch. In the case of this imported watch, based on cost, my estimate is that 99% of the watch’s value is non-intrinsic. Even the gold that forms the exterior of the watch has no genuine practicality. It is a soft metal from which you cannot make tools, nor can you eat it or make a house out of it. Nevertheless, people will pay for such watches for a variety of non-practical reasons. This watch and other items made of precious metals confer visibility. They can indicate one’s level of wealth, which can confer prestige. They can indicate worldliness and social class. Additionally, they can be perceived as things of mechanical complexity and beauty.
(Given that an expensive watch was discussed here, you may not use one as one of your ten items.)
Extra-Credit Assignment # 5
The Sum of My Parts
TEDx Talk by Hilda Mwangi (14 mins. 2017)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7tv7NaV47no
View the video, The Sum of My Parts, a TEDx discussion by Hilda Mwangi. In the vein of the talk by Ms. Mwangi, who discusses the assumptions we make about others, write about diversity and how we judge (or misjudge) it by answering the three questions below (in at least a paragraph each). With respect to diversity, you will be considering culture. You can consider both culture writ large (e.g., national origin, religion and first language) and culture writ small, in other words, in terms of subcultures or micro-cultures (e.g., political affiliation, region of the country someone is from, education, social class, level of wealth, profession or business, life experience – such as being a soldier, travel experience, and overall competence or knowledge, to name just a few factors that play into a person’s diversity).
Extra-Credit Assignment # 6
Cultural Myths in Advertising
Myths are commonly thought of as things that are not true. We have all heard people say, “Oh, that’s a myth,” meaning that something is not entirely accurate or even completely false. By contrast, people who study myths, among them many anthropologists, think of myths as “significant stories that embody the basic values of a culture.” Whether these stories are factually true or not, they embody what people in a culture, including our own, believe is true, often on a subconscious level.
Myths embody beliefs about basic cultural components, such as social class, the “proper” relationship between genders, how race is viewed by a culture, work ethic, sexual orientation, the value of material goods in our lives, the true sources of happiness in life, the relationships of humans to god (or gods), and the importance of the natural world, to name just a few beliefs.
Based on the above definition, for this extra-credit assignment you should do the following in a single-page, single-spaced essay.
Advertising on television, online, in magazines and elsewhere involve stories that sell things and are an important part of our consumer-driven economy. These narratives of events are usually very brief (although infomercials can be longer), but they do a good job of telling stories quickly. They create a narrative, often with a backstory (the implied part of the story that comes before events shown but is not specifically depicted) and consequences of an event or events (sometimes also implied, but sometimes depicted). Often the message is, “if you do this, this is what you will get in your life,” “if you buy this, this is what you will become,” or “ (fill in the blank)____ will make you happy”
The effectiveness of these stories is indicated by the fact that they sell things and are important part of our consumer economy. They fuel the desire in our population for cars, jewelry, groceries, household items, perfume, and more. Each narrative is a myth.
The Assignment. For this extra-credit assignment, in a singles-spaced, full-page essay describe at least two stories (or more if you want) told by two specific pieces of advertising, including any backstory and any unshown, but implied, consequences. In your discussion, be sure to do the following (although you can do more than this):
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