What is Richard’s Point of View? In the article “Keep America Wild,” Richard Powers talks about the changes that the Trump Administration is trying to do to the Mount Katahdin. At first, he gives us the oppositions against the president Donald Trump, since he is considering “delisting” monuments on Katahdin, and as he does this, he uses pathos in an adequate way to persuade his audience. Secondly, Powers indicates the further authorization that Donald Trump is taking throughout his presidency, no other president had ever taken, and as he does this, he brings credible evidence to support his argument and make it credible.
How would the watching world react if humans were kept imprisoned in tight, inhumane enclosures and forced to perform in front of hundreds of people each day? This is the tragic yet vividly-true reality of orca whales, one of many sea creatures set on display in aquariums worldwide. In 1961, the first orca was captured off California’s coast, and to this day, there are at least fifty-five still imprisoned in various marine parks across the globe. While it may be entertaining for the audience to witness these formidable whales flip and spin, this cruelty is only accepted because orcas are viewed as animals without feelings, entrapped for the enjoyment and amusement of the human race. If these orcas ever lash out at their human captors, the media
Language is first learned as an infant by absorbing and mimicking one's environment, surroundings, and daily life. For some, like myself, more than one language is spoken, and learning how to balance multiple languages can be a challenge. Trying to integrate language with culture and environment at times can be interesting and other times demanding and tiresome. Maxine Hong Kingston describes her struggles in coping with the differences in her languages, coming to terms with herself, and accepting how her culture uses language in her essay, “The Language of Silence”. Although similar struggles are had by Christine Marin, she writes in her essay “Spanish Lessons”, about how she discovered her culture through language, how it empowered her, and how she learned to love that part of herself.
Even when the speaker attempts to express their cultural identity in a language that is not their own, there can still be a disconnect in understanding. This reinforces the idea that language is a powerful tool for expressing cultural identity, but it can also create barriers when used to communicate across cultural divides. Overall, "Eyes" illustrates the importance of language in shaping cultural identity, and the complexities that arise when language is used to communicate across
What they want to do is also retain their own language, culture, and identity” (164-167). Here, Espada highlights how language helps people absorb new cultures and offer a wider perception of our world, but that people also want to keep their sense of self-worth without losing
Throughout generations cultural traditions have been passed down, alongside these traditions came language. The language of ancestors, which soon began to be molded by the tongue of newer generations, was inherited. Though language is an everlasting changing part of the world, it is a representation of one’s identity, not only in a cultural way but from an environmental standpoint as well. One’s identity is revealed through language from an environmental point of view because the world that one is surrounded with can cause them to have their own definitions of words, an accent, etc. With newer generations, comes newer forms of languages.
Baldwin describes language as a mean for survival,”What joins all languages, and all men, is the necessity to confront life, in order, not inconceivably, to outwit death” This quote empathizes the importance of understanding that how a language is communicated
Each group has grown up with different values so they have preconceived notions regarding certain topics which is why we need to “value language [it] helps shape common responses of thought, action, and feeling” (Appiah 73). Conversations are important because it opens up our minds to change, and it stops the spread of imaginative engagement, people need to experience certain things for themselves instead of hearing about it. New technology has caused Kwame Anthony Appiah’s vision of cosmopolitanism to come
Language is used to convey a message as well as connect people to a particular culture or ethnicity he or she identifies with. People who share the same language share a bond and pass their history through language. In chapter one of The Skin That We Speak: Thoughts on Language and Culture in the Classroom Joanne Kilgour Dowdy speak about growing up in Trinidad and her mother insisting on her speaking in the colonizer's language rather than her native Trinidadian language. Joanne Kilgour Dowdy felt as if her identity was being pushed to the side when she was forced to speak “Colonized English” when she was at school or around the social elite of her community, and felt ridiculed from her peers for speaking proper as if she was white or of the elite social class. Dowdy major concern was how to have the freedom to go back and forth from home, language to the public language without feeling judged from both sides of her
The Croods: anthropology media analysis answers 1. The ancestral group the Croods belonged to were the Homo neanderthalensis also known as the Neanderthals. There are many firm reasons why the Croods belonged to Neanderthals, for example according to many anthropologists Neanderthals had short, muscular, and powerful bodies with larger faces and bigger brains and the Croods fit into this description of being a Neanderthals. Another reason why the Croods were Neanderthals because in the beginning of the movie it was show that the Croods live in a cave and as per anthologist they believe that Neanderthals used to live in caves also known as cavemen’s as it was mentioned by the Croods that they were cavemen.
For my paper I interviewed John Navarra, a professor at UNCW. He has taught at UNCW almost since he graduated from there. Mr. Navarra is a Wilmingtonian himself, as am I. He is my archaeology teacher, and one of the youngest active archaeology professors I have met. Mr. Navarra teaches part time at UNCW, but also at a community college.
Lera Boroditsky, a professor at Stanford, introduces readers to the question of whether a person’s language can shape their thought processes and views of the world around them through her research conducted at Stanford and MIT. Boroditsky explores further into the questioning about a language’s influence in her article “Lost in Translation”. Boroditsky proves to an audience of broad audience of scholars and people interested in cultural psychology that a person’s language not only influences the way a person thinks but can change a person’s perception of the world and media around them. Lera Boroditsky, through her use of rhetorical questions, comparisons, and addressing the counterargument achieves her purpose of proving that language does
No, I don't think it is possible to create dinosaurs like those from Jurrasic Park. Although, I think that scientists are trying to make it happen so that they can receive more information about these extinct animals and share the knowledge to younger generations about evolution. I, personally, do not believe it is right to try and recreate dinosaurs. First, if anyone has seen Jurassic Park they should know that animals like that would be extremely difficult to contain and control. We would only hide behind our technology to protect us, but if that happens to fail then we're vulnerable.
Have you ever thought about which animals are near extinction or endangerment ? Have you looked them up? How many are left? Which ones have been removed? Do you know why they are going endangered?
Who are we? What forms one's identity? Language is a important element of culture and culture is known to be crucial definer of one's identity. Language connects people to a certain identity and allows them to communicate their ideas and values to themselves and the world... In other words language is important as it allows people to express their thoughts as well as beliefs.