"Buddhist temple ethnography" Essays and Research Papers

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    title so I named it "Temple of Nature." This painting is very large and takes up the whole wall. It has four columns wrapped with leaves and on the column to the far right it has a snake on it. In the center it has a big red door that catches the eye. On both sides of the door there is some writing‚ by my guess it looks to be Japanese or Korean‚ but I am not sure. There are palm trees on the right side of the painting‚ and at the top the columns seem to connect by an arch.  "Temple of Nature" is a two-dimensional

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    Barbara Rogoff studied cultural transmission in several families across different indigenous cultures. Her ethnographic research tries to show that cultural factors combine with biological factors to shape a child’s behavior‚ values‚ and gender identity. She was inspired by the work of Vygotsky‚ who claimed that human activities and skills take place in cultural contexts and that development is mediated by linguistic‚ social‚ and cultural interactions. This made sense to her because humans change

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    Jewish life cycle ​ The basic events in the Jewish life cycle are birth‚ circumcision/naming‚ coming-of-age‚ marriage‚ and death. Each of these events is commemorated in Jewish ritual. When a Jewish boy is born‚ he traditionally undergoes a ceremony known as a Brit Milah. This is a ritual circumcision performed by a mohel when the infant is eight days old. If he is a first-born son‚ an additional ceremony is performed when the boy is 31 days old‚ called pidyon ha-ben. Since all first things belong

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    Comparison between the Ten Commandments and Buddhist Precepts The Ten Commandments‚ which‚ according to the Holy Bible‚ are inscribed on two stone tablets and presented to Moses by God on Mount Sinai‚ are the most prominent biblical principle adhered by believers of Judaism and Christianity. Not too far around the globe‚ Buddhism‚ a religion that originated in India‚ also upholds its own disciplines‚ the most fundamental of which is commonly known as “the Five Precepts”‚ namely to abstain from

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    Guests of the Sheik: Ethnography of an Iraqi Village Written in the late 1950’s this is ethnography of a small village El Nahra‚ in Iraq. Elizabeth Fernea‚ the author‚ is the new wife of an anthropologist‚ who joins her husband in Iraq to do his graduate work. As an American woman‚ Elizabeth eventually chooses to integrate herself into tribal society by donning the traditional abayah (what we know as a burka)‚ avoiding being seen by unfamiliar men. She lives and eats and works as the women

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    Gift exchange and reciprocity in societies Gift exchange is a key aspect of life and is constantly employed within cultures to maintain social relations between people. Seldom acknowledged and hardly spoken about‚ there are many unwritten rules that determine what we give‚ the quantity given‚ and to whom we give. Reciprocity is closely intertwined with gift exchange as it describes a situation in which an item or service is repaid. According to Mauss (as cited in Reciprocity‚ n.d.)‚ reciprocity entails

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    Reader’s Response #2: Celebrity Status Within Celebrity Status (Kurzman et al)‚ the authors imagined a Weberian analysis of celebrity as a status group. This analysis is carried out in two ways. First‚ they examine Max Weber’s approach to the relationship between status group and capitalism and second‚ they introduce the celebrity system‚ four aspects of the Weberian concept of status‚ and then compare and contrast modern-status groups to pre-modern-status groups. To begin‚ Weber defined status

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    OUR LADY OF FATIMA UNIVERSITY College of Hospitality & Institutional Management Valenzuela City A Feasibility Study “Reawakening the Nobleness of Hwa Chong Temple of Buddha in Malabon City” In partial fulfillment of the requirements for the course Tourism Planning and Development For a degree in Bachelor of Science in Travel Management Submitted by: Camille A. Bondoc Adonijah B. Cacnio Karen Anne E. dela Cruz Jaizel Ann B. Francisco Famila Mae M. Neis Submitted To:

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    The Differences between Buddhist Music in Japan‚ China and Tibet The Differences between Buddhist Music in Japan‚ China and Tibet “The whole purpose of religion is to facilitate love and compassion‚ patience‚ tolerance‚ humility‚ forgiveness.” -Dalai Lama Music plays an important role in religion‚ significantly influencing the worship practices of individuals who follow these faiths. As the music of a certain faith is influenced by the culture of a place‚ the music of certain peoples

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    In today’s society we often ask the question why people suffer‚ what is there pain‚ and what is the actual cause. In Buddhist philosophy we can come to understand that suffering in an eventual part of life. Dukkha (Suffering) can come in the form of physical‚ mental‚ and emotional states that all can lead an unsatisfactory way of life. The reason for this is that we all obtain temporary happiness for a certain period but after that has expired we are back at Dukkha. For instance when we are young

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