|
Essays! ALL of the following essays are available for same
day delivery via your choice of e-mail or fax! Only $/pg
+ FREE bibliography!
Make your selection below!...
|
Papers On Anthropology
Page 45 of 60
|
|
Southern History, Southern Family
[ send me this essay ]
A 3 page essay on southern family life. The writer discusses the relevance of family history in the way many southerners perceive themselves today. Race relations, culture, and other historical factors all contribute to the importance of family in this region of the Untied States. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
Filename: Histsout.doc
Spanish Immigrants To America
[ send me this essay ]
8 pages in length. The writer discusses several pertinent points in relation to Spanish immigration to American: point of origin, immigration, present population concentration, physical characteristics, psychological characteristics, natural skills and abilities, subsequent job recruitment, role and status definition in the family, socialization of young, how original language relates to present speech patterns, aesthetics, religion, traditions and customs, economics, political participation, nativism, level of assimilation and current trend of prejudice/discrimination. Bibliography lists 5 sources.
Filename: TLCspnim.doc
Special Education/Ethical Issues & Disciplinary Actions
[ send me this essay ]
A 4 page research paper that offers a hypothetical scenario in order to discuss the ethical ramifications of a work place situation involving a special education student. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
Filename: khseeis.rtf
Spirituality of Neolithic Man ; The Relevance of the Megaliths
[ send me this essay ]
This 4 page paper looks at the history of man during the Neolithic Age. Many scholars have presented the idea that the megaliths were built as a result of the transition to farming from a hunter gather society, making it possible for these megaliths to be built. This paper argues that it may not have been due this change in life style, but an increased spirituality which lead to the building of these monuments combined with better technology, which in turn lead to the sedentary lifestyle. Comparisons are also made with the current practise of Ancestor worship in some parts of the world. The bibliography cites 6 sources.
Filename: TEneolit.wps
Stavrianos' Lifelines From Our Past
[ send me this essay ]
This 3 page paper takes a look at the book and uses it as a springboard for discussion. Technology is given a lot of attention.
Bibliography lists 1 source.
Filename: SA708Sta.rtf
Strengths and Weaknesses of Ethnography
[ send me this essay ]
This is a 4 page paper which discusses the strengths and weaknesses of ethonography as a method of research.
The bibliography has 2 sources.
Filename: JHStre.rtf
Structural Functionalist Themes in “Black Elk Speaks”
[ send me this essay ]
This is a 5 page paper discussing structural functionalism in relation to themes presented in “Black Elk Speaks”. “Black Elk Speaks” as told through John G. Neihardt portrays several social and religious aspects of the Sioux while they are faced with their own destruction by the invasion of the white men. Black Elk, a holy man, provides commentary on the structure of the individuals within his own tribe through a vision he has which includes himself, all the levels in his tribe, all the men, women, children, warriors and the spirits of their ancestors. This vision and faith in their structure allows Black Elk and his tribe hope in their negotiations with the intrusion of the white man. Structural functionalism also deals with the evolution of social and religious forces which shape social and religious roles within a community and the slow religious transition and inclusion of the Catholic Mission into the lives of the Sioux allows for Black Elk as a religious leader to promote the cohesiveness of his tribe while remaining within the restrictive new laws of the country.
Bibliography lists 5 sources.
Filename: TJNBElk1.rtf
Structuralism in the Study of Media and Culture
[ send me this essay ]
This is a 6 page paper discussing structuralism in the study of media and culture. Structuralism is based on the premise that “societies and sociological or cultural practices can be analyzed, along the lines of language, as signifying systems [and within] structuralism the subject is decentered, in other words the central focus on the individual in much social analysis is replaced by the focus on the structures, of which the individual is just another element”. Structuralist methods apply to various divisions within the social sciences such as the linguistics of Ferdinand de Saussure, the cultural critical of Roland Barthes, the anthropology of Claude Levi-Strauss and the psychoanalysis of Jacques Lacan. Structuralism plays a large part in the presentation and perception of the media as some critics believe that viewers can look beyond media reports by perceiving the signs throughout the text while other researchers, such as Barthes in his post-structural phase, believed that language was not transparent by in fact most communication was distorted and could not be presented otherwise. Structuralism overall, tends to assume that there is a structure or a “depth model” in which researchers can find the “truth” and in so doing are able to “stand outside language using the meta-languages of linguistic, sociological or philosophical analysis.
Bibliography lists 5 sources.
Filename: TJstruct1.rtf
Suicide And The Native American
[ send me this essay ]
Native Americans are not culturally
predisposed to suicide. They are, however, at high risk for suicide as
a result of both social and physical factors. This 5 page paper
explores a number of different factors that contribute to the high rate
of suicide among Native Americans. Bibliography lists 9 sources.
Filename: KTindian.wps
Summary of the PBS Documentary Myths and the Moundbuilders (1980)
[ send me this essay ]
The main points of this 1980 documentary featured as part of the PBS series Odyssey are summarized in a paper consisting of three pages. Two sources are listed in the bibliography.
Filename: TGpbsmyths.rtf
Symbolic Anthropology And Materialistic Anthropology: How They Relate To Idealism And Materialism
[ send me this essay ]
6 pages in length. Within the fundamental framework of human culture exists a dichotomy of anthropological applications that ultimately form man's behavior and outlook. These divergent elements, as espoused by Marshall David Sahlins and Clifford Geertz, help bring to light the very essence of what it means to be part of a particular
society based solely upon one's cultural understanding. Sahlins' "Stone Age Economics" and Geertz's "The Interpretation of Cultures" present extremely opposite explication of what prompts humanity to seek certain materialistic commodities, as well as act in certain ways, with Sahlins supporting the view of materialistic anthropology and Geertz, symbolic anthropology. However, even though each author has his own interpretation of how
mankind is ultimately compelled into action, they both come to the same conclusion with regard to the axiomatic foundation of such motivation: cultural influence of idealism and materialism. No additional sources cited.
Filename: TLCanthr.wps
So what's your essay topic?
|