STAYING ON COURSE
Meeting once a week can lead to a pitfall -- being disoriented about our course of actions.
Remember to
- Read the Kottak chapter for the week and read the Conformity and Conflict Chapter assigned and write a 250-500 response each week (exceptions are in the schedule).
- Take the online quiz when indicated on the schedule
- Prepare for your group's presentation -- the assignments are on the blog
- Begin to consider an aspect of life/culture you would like to study through participant-observation for your final project -- a mini-ethnography. We will do some exercises and actually draft your proposal during class on Thu Oct 16th. You will revise it and set up an interview the next week. A deadline will be announced in class.
Consider we are interviewing individuals but from an anthropological perspective, individuals are a reflection of larger cultural phenomena. The interview will be used to gain insight into the emic worldview of a specific culture through the individual/interviewee. As the ethnographer, you will have to determine the framing of what you learn--this is the etic viewpoint, applying anthropologial concepts and thinking, choosing what captures your attention and it may or may not be what the interviewee thinks is interesting about his/her own culture.
Here's a excerpt from Chapter 3 - Culture of the Kottak to get you thinking about what you will be studying.
Culture and the Individual: Agency and Practice (from Kottak Ch.3)GETTING STARTED/BRAINSTORMING A POSSIBLE PROJECT:
- People use their culture actively and creatively, rather than blindly following its dictates. Cultures are dynamic and constantly changing.
- Culture is contested—that is, different groups in society struggle with one another over whose ideas, values, goals, and beliefs will prevail.
- Common symbols may have radically different meanings to different individuals and groups in the same culture.
- Ideal culture consists of what people say they should do and what they say they do, whereas real culture refers to their actual behavior.
- Agency refers to the actions that individuals take, both alone and in groups, in forming and transforming cultural identities.
- Practice theory recognizes that individuals within a society or culture have diverse motives and intentions and different degrees of power and influence.
- Practice theory focuses on how individuals influence, create, and transform the world they live in.
- Culture shapes how individuals experience and respond to external events, but individuals also play an active role in how society functions and changes.
- Who would you love to meet from NYC and why? Call or email about an interview for a course at Baruch College.
- What cultural event or institution do you already participate in that you could study? Who would be a great key cultural consultant?
- What matters to you regarding family, gender, ethnicity, nationality, religion, social stratification, or the world? Is there an institution, an event, or a person whom would make a great key cultural consultant on how things work?
- Who is a person you already know whom you admire and why? Consider interviewing them on their life from an anthropological view. (i.e., How did you become a successful stock broker on Wall Street as a woman? This would explore gender and business.)
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