A corporate life, an ape in a suit and tie, puts himself in a coma from the morning to five, strives to fulfill
A corporate life, an ape in a suit and tie, puts himself in a coma from the morning to five, strives to fulfill
Napoleon Chagnon spent 19 months living among them, gathering information about their genealogies and the value they placed on aggression in their societies (such as public wife beatings to assert their manliness). He arrived with visions of being “adopted into their way of life” so he could be listed among “successful anthropologists.” However, he was met with intense culture shock in the form of: deception and greed.…
In this paper I discuss what point Horace Miner was trying to make is his paper titled "Body Ritual among the Nacirema". Horace’s paper is about America but in the perspective that America is a tribe of third world country or such. I go through the individual topics, which mostly make fun of American’s vanity, and I describe what he is really talking about. I try to summaries Horace’s paper and put it in “American” terms.…
Some critics say that the whole novel can be found, in miniature, on its first page. Consider how the first chapter of Wind from an Enemy Sky by D’Arcy McNickle frames and anticipates the rest of the novel, as if it were a part that contains the whole.…
This documentary goes deep into history and answers the main question of, “How did our worlds become so different?” Jared Diamond takes on the challenge most philosophers wouldn’t dare try of dividing the haves and have-nots of the world. His journey began in the forests of Papua New Guinea. As of 30 years ago, they were still using some of the techniques used in the Stone Age. People hunted by tracking their prey and used bow and arrows. Their main source of food was the Sago tree; this only provided about 70 pounds of food and did not provide the nutrients needed to survive. Women did most of the gathering and processed the pulp taken out of the Sago tree.…
Instructor: Dr. Joyce Parga; Email: j.parga@utoronto.ca Office hours: Tuesdays & Thursdays 3-4 pm (or by appointment); Office: MW 382 Lecture meeting times and location: Tuesdays 1-3 pm in SW 319 Tutorials (labs): 5 Tuesdays across the semester during your 1-hr tutorial section in MW 329 Tutorial TA: Dejana Nikitovic; Email: dejana.nikitovic@mail.utoronto.ca; Office: MW 343 (Note: Tutorials begin in Week 3 on Tuesday May 21. See Tutorial Schedule at end of syllabus.) Course Description: This course will provide a basic introduction to Evolutionary Anthropology and Archaeology, aimed at students with no background in either field. Prerequisites: None Exclusions: ANT100Y, ANT101H Required Readings: All chapters listed below in the lecture schedule refer to the following course textbook, which is available for purchase from the UTSC bookstore: Lewis, B., Jurmain, R., and Kilgore, L., 2012. Understanding Humans: Introduction to Physical Anthropology and Archaeology, 11th edition. Belmont CA: Wadsworth. You can also purchase the text from the publisher as an e-book. Go to: http://www.nelsonbrain.com/shop/isbn/9781111831776 (On Blackboard, there is a PowerPoint file provided by the publisher about buying the e-book – look under “Course Materials”.) Lecture schedule: Following is a planned list of topics to be covered in lecture; note that topics are subject to change and all topics listed may not be covered, but you are responsible for doing all of the readings. Date 7 May 14 May 21 May Lecture Topic Course Intro /What is Anthropology/Evolution Genetics/Processes of Evolution Non-Human Primates/Primate Behaviour…
Homo erectus (literally "upright man") is an extinct hominin that lived between 1.8 million and 50,000 years ago. The first fossil found of this species (the type specimen) was a skullcap discovered in 1891 by Eugène Dubois. However, the species was not named until 1894, after a femur (thigh bone) was discovered not far from the skullcap. The femur was nearly identical to that of a modern human, prompting Dubois to name a new species: Pithecanthropus erectus (literally "upright apeman"). Both fossils were found in Trinil, Java. The type specimen was named "Trinil 2"and the femur "Trinil 3." They are more commonly known as "Java Man."…
2. Explore the rise of the city. In what ways was the city different from the large villages of…
Jared Diamond, author of the Pulitzer Prize Winning, National Best Selling book Guns, Germs and Steel, summarizes his book by saying the following: "History followed different courses for different peoples because of differences among peoples ' environments, not because of biological differences among peoples themselves." Guns, Germs and Steel is historical literature that documents Jared Diamond 's views on how the world as we know it developed. However, is his thesis that environmental factors contribute so greatly to the development of society and culture valid? Traditions & Encounters: A Brief Global History is the textbook used for this class and it poses several different accounts of how society and culture developed that differ from Diamond 's claims. However, neither Diamond nor Traditions are incorrect. Each poses varying, yet true, accounts of the same historical events. Each text chose to analyze history in a different manner. Not without flaws, Jared Diamond makes many claims throughout his work, and provides numerous examples and evidence to support his theories. In this essay, I will summarize Jared Diamond 's accounts of world history and evolution of culture, and compare and contrast it with what I have learned using the textbook for this class.…
In his novel, Last of the Mohican’s, James Fenimore Cooper illustrates a broad scope of human behaviors and types through a cast of characters ranging from the savage Huron warrior Magua to the fiery and courageous half-sister Cora Munro and her fair and meek sister Alice the passionate and noble Uncas, his wise father Chingachgook and their adopted ally and family member Hawkeye. The relationships between these characters are rich and in many ways as similar as their fates are intertwined.…
6. Most scholars believe that, during the Paleolithic Age, social organization was characterized by (p. 14)…
In 1963 Martin Luther King gave the most powerful and famous speech in the history of the United States. 40 years later, no other speech has been able to overcome the effect that this speech has had on the American people generation after generation. Despite the fact that the message of the speech is perhaps the most enduring aspect of the speech, the rhetorical strategies Martin Luther King used were instrumental in captivating the attention of millions people then, and now. The purpose of “I have a dream” was to awaken awareness about the importance of equality and to transcend his vision through the use of pathos, ethos and biblical imagery, among other elements; these are the strategies that enabled him to compose a dialogue that is essentially as motivating as a work of poetry.…
Grassian realized “these people were very sick.”(Maclyn Willigan “What Solitary Confinement Does to the Human Brain”) Researcher Stuart Grassian who interview many men at Walpole State Penitentiary in 1982. she found that the men talked with symptoms “such as hallucinatory tendencies, paranoia, and delirium”( Maclyn Willigan “What Solitary Confinement Does to the Human Brain” ) Grassian characterize them as “SHU Syndrome” this syndrome has symptoms of PTSD, insomnia and uncontrollable feelings of rage and fear.…
Through the culture of youth, so rampant among all, there is an aura of almost strict defiance from all modern social norms. Whether it be due to a yearning for greater unknown freedoms akin to solidarity, or even manipulation by archaic idealists, the loss of needed human companionship to some is quite appealing. In the novel Into the Wild by Jon Krakuer and Walden by Henry David Thoreau, the main protagonist’s under a strict transformation with their eventual attempts to live a native sapien lifestyle.…
The cyclic nature of access and maintenance of power includes propagandizing that accentuates belonging to tribes and incites xenophobia’s. In the film, a symbolic nirvana of Chief Bromden’s tribal background is portrayed through persistent tribal rhythms in the final scene as he elopes into the life-affirming wilderness. Pre Columbian America represents a period before colonization where the fundamental truth of belonging to the Earth, and to one another atomically satisfied a simple path to happiness. This is also supported in ‘symphony of science’, whereby powerful use of anaphora, “we are all connected; to each other, biologically; to the earth, chemically; to the rest of the universe atomically” redefines the scientific truth that every human being shares a common ground with one another. However, European immigration eventually usurped the native culture and tribes like Chief’s were forced to assimilate into the ‘white man’s’ way of life; institutionalization. Even today, the underlying human instinct to belong to a tribe is accentuated as the conformist notions of society coincide with one’s struggle to reach autonomous culture. In ‘Ancestors’, irony emphasizes the physical, emotional and ideological gap between Peter and his Ancestors, and illustrates the possibility of him ever belonging to his Polish culture as being utterly farfetched, “from…
In Eugene O’Neill’s story, The Hairy Ape introduces a number of characters such as Robert Smith (Yank), Paddy and Mildred Douglas who come from all walks of life but are all in figurative cages and sometimes literal ones. Some cages they choose to place ourselves in such as addiction, social status and need to sacrifice their freedom to get what they feel each one feels they need in life. While many feel these cages are the fault of others and there is no escape, the opposite is usually true. Yank, Paddy and Mildred each suffer different consequences from their social class cages. The emotional pain from feeling like they have not worth in society to feeling disconnected from the rest of the world, to living in hell and finding any way to cope…