Last week, I wrote about what I thought about the word “culture”, what it meant to me, and how it related of coming of age. I discussed on how culture to me meant the customs and beliefs of your past generation passed on to you and creating that to your image. This week I’ve now realized there are many other factors of culture that influence our way of life. Pop culture plays a big role if not more on who we are and how we behave. I discovered that many aspects like television and social media affect culture and change it frequently. In Tim Delaney’s ‘Pop Culture: An Overview’ he mentioned “popular culture encompasses the most immediate and contemporary aspects of our lives. These aspects are often subject to rapid change, especially in a highly…
With the planned symmetry of the number eleven, the Great War, as it was then called, came to an end on the eleventh hour of the eleventh day of the eleventh month in 1918. The conclusion of World War One marks, quite logically, one 'bookend' for both Canadian and world history. Two very different decades would follow. "The Roaring Twenties" were marked by unprecedented but unequally distributed prosperity. "The Dirty Thirties" witnessed untold suffering and hardship as the Great Depression left millions unemployed, destitute, and hungry. Then on September 1, 1939, the other 'bookend' would appeared, with the Nazi blitzkrieg of Poland, and the outbreak of World War Two.…
1. What event was most directly responsible for the rise of the gun powder empires in Turkey, Iran, and India and similar states in Tsarist Russia and Ming China?…
This changing media is discussed within the paper Copy and Paste Literacy. In it, the author, Dan Perkel proposes that, “deviating from de Certeau, Jenkins reveals how various fan groups produce tangible artifacts, such as fan fiction and “transform the experience of media consumption into the production of new texts, indeed of a new culture and new community.”...Ito (forthcoming) builds on these arguments and debate concerning active and passive media audiences and argues that “new convergent media…require a reconfigured conceptual apparatus that takes productive and creative activity at the ‘consumer’ level as a given rather than as an addendum or an exception”” (Perkel 11). A new, evolved, type of media is being examined, an example of which is fan-fiction. There are works, in the form of stories and movies, that different people become fans of. They then create new stories called fan-fiction that are based off of or come from ideas they received when viewing the original work. In this way, media is becoming more participation based instead of consumption based. The general public isn’t just consuming media, they are participating in and creating it, hence the label “new”…
AP World History Reading Guide Ch 20 The Muslim Empires 1) Which of the following was NOT one of the early modern Islamic empires? * Ottoman * Abbasid * Gujarat * Mughal * Safavid 2) How were the three Muslim early modern empires similar? 3) What were the differences between the various Muslim early modern empires? 4) Prior to the Mongol invasions of their empire, the Abbasid dynasty was dominated by what group? 5) The original base of the Ottoman Turks was where? 6) Following the Timurid invasions, the Ottoman Empire was restored under what leader? 7) The Ottomans conquered Constantinople and ended the Byzantine Empire in what year? 8) Describe Ottoman naval. 9) Who were the Janissaries? 10) What permitted the Janissaries to gain a position of prominence in the Ottoman Empire? 11) The head of the Ottoman central bureaucracy was the…? 12) What was the principle of succession within the Ottoman Empire? 13) One of the most beautiful of the Ottoman mosques of Constantinople was the? 14) What did the Ottomans do to Constantinople following its fall in 1453? 15) In what way were the artisans of Constantinople similar to their counterparts in the West? 16) What was the chosen language of the Ottoman court? 17) How did the Ottoman dynasty compare to other ruling families? 18) What were the causes for the decline of the Ottoman Empire? 19) On the sea, the Ottoman galleys were eclipsed by Western naval power as early as? 20) What European nation first threatened the Ottoman monopoly of trade with East Africa and India? 21) What were the results of the Ottoman loss of monopoly over the Indian trade? 22) Which group represented such extreme conservatism within the Ottoman Empire that reform was frustrated? 23) What were the differences between the declines of the Abbasids and the Ottomans? 24) What were the differences between the origins of the Ottomans and the Safavids? 25) The center of the Safavid Empire was the modern-day state of? 26) The Safavid dynasty had its origins…
What are some other examples we have learned about since September in which the United States expressed a feeling of “cultural superiority” and does this mentality still exist today?…
CHAPTER 15 The Latin West, 1200–1500 The period from 1200 to 1500 is better known as Europe’s [A] later Middle Ages. [B] Last Age. [C] Golden Age. [D] Renaissance. [E] Age of Reason. Western Europeans of the later Middle Ages referred to themselves as [A] Europeans. [B] Westerners. [C] “Old Worlders.” [D] Franks. [E] Latins. In the Latin West during the later Middle Ages approximately [A] nine out of ten people were rural. [B] five out of ten people were rural. [C] three out of ten people were rural. [D] one out of ten people was rural. [E] one out of twenty people was rural. In return for the use of their lord’s land, serfs [A] were required to send their children to the religious schools. [B] served half the year as knights. [C] paid money for rent. [D] worked as bureaucrats for the monarch. [E] had to give the lord a share of the harvest and perform services. In Europe’s later Middle Ages women were considered to be [A] superior to men. [B] equal to men. [C] suited only to be servants. [D] essential contributors to spiritual practice. [_E] inferior to men._ The three-field system was [A] the traditional three-part contest performed by knights. [B] an agricultural method. [C] the technology used in Medieval optics. [D] the legal system. [E] the political relationship between king, lord, and serf. The average life expectancy for a European of this period was [A] twenty to twenty-five years. [B] twenty-five to thirty years. [C] thirty to thirty-five years. [D] thirty-five to forty years. [E] over forty years. By the time it subsided, the Black Death killed [A] one out of three Western Europeans. [B] one out of five Western Europeans. [C] one out of ten Western Europeans. [D] one out of twenty Western Europeans. [E] a negligible number of Western Europeans Which of the following was not a social result of the Black Death epidemic? [A] a demand by…
In John Milton Cooper Jr’s “Why Wisconsin? The Badger State in the Progressive Era” he talks about why Wisconsin was the leading state in the progressive movement and if it was just by a freak accident or not. Wisconsin became known as the laboratory of democracy around this time period by leading the reform movements that became known as progressivism. Many people like to accredit this to its people’s naturally bright, creative, forward looking attitudes. Yet there was no good reason why Wisconsin should have been the state to take the lead with this movement.…
Unfortunately, I missed the opportunity to participate in the group discussion in person on the day we were on campus. I have since emailed both particpants in my group, Anna Guzman and Tara Rhodes, who both responded promptly that everyone was submitting short answers to the questions in our discussion group, to compare and analyze. I have since compared and reviewed their answers with mine and we have similar opinions on Shackleton’s leadership traits, the meaning of the great achievement of failure to us all seemed to be that his greatest achievement was successfully keeping his team of men alive for two years. Not only did he keep them alive, they were for the most part happy and positive until the end. I think we also all agreed that leading by example was the greatest motivator he gave to his team. People are more likely to do what you ask if they see you alongside of them working just as hard. Learning about Shackleton has been one of the most enjoyable parts of my BSN education and I look forward to researching and learning more about him.…
In this research paper, Paul Booth and Peter Kelly carried out an ethnographic research on fans. Specifically they discussed the change that the advent of new digital technology brought to the world of fandom and to the shifting identity of fans. Their aim is to establish that despite the advent of new technologies fandom has not entirely changed its meaning but has expanded itself. This article has been published by an online Journal called “Participations: Journal of Audience & Reception Studies” which main aim is to strengthen the fields of audience and reception studies and as many other articles on it, Booth’s and Kelly’s work encourages an open debate not only with media scholars but also with the subjects of the research itself. In fact, the researchers took in consideration the voices of 115 people at the Chicago Tardis convention for fans of Doctor Who and gave them the opportunity of questioning their own ideas about their identities as fans. Even though some of its elements do not perfectly match the conception of fan in 2016 and some of its point could have been analyzed more in depth, this research still gives a good explanation…
With reference to research, critically discuss how knowledge of 'fandom' and 'fan' activities has contributed to our understanding of media audiences.…
These days it seems that the Internet, a post-modern medium, something so complex and vital to our society as being reduce to a mere antiquity of personal feuds and interactive relationships (or at least the satisfaction of what seems like a relationship) between people. The rise of social media applications like Twitter and Facebook allows people to voice their opinions to wider audience, creating a pluralist, postmodern medium in which questions raised about the impact of mediated relationships have surely increased. What is particularly interesting about Twitter (and to a lesser extent Facebook) is the newfound proximity we ‘normal people’ have to modern celebrities. These Celebrities once performed their professional duties at a distance and were only accessible through one-way relationships; third parties such as tabloids, TV shows, and interviews. Now, however they are within our reach. Newsstand and tabloids enjoyed being filled with negative portrayal of celebrities: Twitter acts as a way for celebrities let their fans know what is happening in their lives, circumventing (equally) biased third parties, and allowing them to portray their own Star Persona.…
Comfort zones are of upmost importance to numerous individuals. It is rather difficult to find an individual who is confident enough with oneself to step out on a limb and explore other communities. This is perfectly characterized through both Gene Weingarten’s “Pearls Before Breakfast” and Hal Niedzviecki’s interview on “The Peep Diaries”. Weingarten purposefully illustrates the common individual failing to open their eyes to the outside world, through their apathy to the absolutely exceptional music being played by the famous violinist right before their eyes. This elicits the fact that is extremely challenging for the average American to not only explore other worlds, but nonetheless, having an awareness of the outside world is not an easy feat either. Weingarten makes us aware that it is a shame that the average person is too busy in his or her daily life to even remotely notice the flawless music being played in a station. In “The Peep Diaries” Niedzviecki convinces the reader that we are blinded by our own social media worlds. Not only do we fail to gain meaningful relationships through our engrossment with the digital age, but also we stay locked into the shallow world, afraid to explore and recognize the beauty that this world has to offer beyond the single-dimensional technological world. Social media becomes an addiction…
If you always believe that winning is everything, winning will not come easly to a team that doesn’t act like a team. A true winning team does not believe that winning is everything. I dissagree with the quote (“Winning isn’t everything it’s the only thing,” ) that is winning is everything because to win you must like what you’re doing, you must like ur teammates, and you must have a good attitude.…
Start at the Worldviews Web site. Click on the Introduction link, then scroll down and read the information on Maya Writing & Symbolism and Maya Civilization. Use this information to answer the following questions. 1 | | Where was the Classic Maya civilization located? | 2 | | What kinds of images appear on Maya ceramics? | 3 | | Next, click on "The Cosmos" link. How do researchers know that the ceramics were actually used? | 4 | | Which kind of ceramic is more likely to have images of the cosmos? | 5 | | Using the description here and any information from the Web site as a whole, offer some reasons why certain kinds of ceramics contain specific images (such as the…