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    Amish Culture Essay

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    It is fact that the Amish culture is dominated by males‚ men are seen as more important than women; males traditionally being the leaders of the community. Men in the Amish culture are heads of the church‚ head of their family‚ are held responsible for the decisions and welfare of their family and are passed down family farms from generation to generation. In the Amish culture‚ females are expected to traditionally accept their role to marry and be a farmwife‚ when Amish women marry they are agreeing

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    The Amish Culture

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    reform-minded Mennonites began called‚ The Amish. Their simplicity lifestyle‚ ways of living and unique beliefs set them apart from other cultures. Evolving agriculturalists cultivating soil‚ producing crops‚ raising and hording livestock‚ classifying the Amish as Horticulturalists‚ is their identified primary way of subsistence. We‚ as Americans‚ primarily buy foods and handmade products from The Amish. As customers‚ it’s vital to know about The Amish way of living‚ traditions‚ and how they withstand

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    Amish Culture Essay

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    The simple and unique Amish culture was founded in 1693 in Europe by Jakob Ammann (Treating) and members after defecting from the Anabaptist movement of 1525 (Purnell pg 37). Soon after defecting from the movement‚ many of the members of the newly founded Amish church were sought after for persecution and for that reason immigrated to the United States of America during the 17th and 18th centuries. (Purnell pg 37). Today the Amish culture has expanded throughout twenty states including but not limited

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    The Amish Culture

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    The Amish Culture The Amish are a fascinating people. They live surrounded by cities full of technology. Yet they live without automobiles‚ electricity‚ and most modern comforts that are taken for granted by many. Donald Kraybill asks the question “How is it that a tradition-laden people who spurn electricity‚ computers‚ automobiles‚ and higher education are not merely surviving but are‚ in fact‚ thriving in the midst of modern life?” Though they do not have all of the technology that we

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    Amish Culture

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    The Amish‚ without their electricity‚ cars‚ and television appear to be a static culture‚ never changing. This is just an illusion. The Amish are a self-motivated culture which is‚ through market forces and other means‚ continually interacting with the enormously tempting culture of America. The Amish have not only survived as a gemeinschaft type of society‚ but has grown and flourished while surrounded by a culture that would seem to be so detrimental to its basic ideals. The Amish‚ through population

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    Amish Culture

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    The Amish immigrated to America in two waves. The first wave was between 1736-1770 when about five hundred Amish landed at the port of Philadelphia and settled in southeastern Pennsylvania counties‚ including Lancaster. A vital part of Amish culture‚ a German dialect called Pennsylvania Dutch‚ helped the Amish settlers in America to communicate with other Germanic speaking communities in the country. The second‚ larger wave of Amish immigrants arrived in America roughly between 1815-1860. During

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    Amish Culture

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    The Amish aren’t a modern day 18th century time capsule‚ but a society that experiences change through time. This religion based on culture is the tool of the isolation from mainstream society. They keep a simple‚ non-technological life creating a mainstream society believing in peace‚ cooperation and pride. Their lives mean comprises have to be made to follow their ordnung‚ sacrifices such as Electricity and telephones‚ Amish travel in horse drawn buggies and refuse to own a car‚ education is finished

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    The Amish Culture

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    different sub-cultures or countercultures

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    Amish Culture - Essay 2

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    one consider the Amish communities as rebellious? The Amish are a unique subculture of the United States that do not adopt customs‚ norms‚ and lifestyles of the broader society (Sternheimer‚ 2012). Just because they set themselves apart from social norms‚ does not make them deviate. The Amish is an old religious group that originated in Europe. In the sixteenth century‚ Jakob Ammann and other devoted followers broke away from the Anabaptists and establish themselves as the Amish. Due to a disagreement

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    Amish Culture Odel R. Ortega ANT 101 Introduction to Cultural Anthropology Prof. Corinne Barker April 01‚ 2012 Amish Culture The Amish or Anabaptists date back to sixteenth-century Europe were they lived a life of turmoil due to their subsequent believes. The Amish’s primary mode of subsistence known as emerging agriculturalists‚ a method of cultivating soil‚ producing crops‚ raising and hording livestock. Traditional Amish culture revolve around agriculture‚ farm life is practiced and

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