Anthony Smedley Who Dat Summary

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Anthro 9 Paper 1
Topic 2
Yunyu (Reha) Shi According to social Darwinism, the differences in the society are not tied to culture but to race. (Throop, lecture) However, anthropologists have made progress in critiquing the misrepresented assertion. Marc D. Perry, author of the journal “Who Dat?: Race and Its Conspicuous Consumption in Post-Katrina New Orleans” illustrates “neoliberal” based on “racializ[ing]” of post-Katrina, especially with actual examples took places in New Orleans. (2015:92) Comparably, Audrey Smedley, author of “‘Race’ and the Construction of Human Identity,” generalizes the difference between “race” and “ethnicity” determined by time, when racial grouping was conditioned into the America, and impacts on the minorities’ …show more content…

Long time of power, wealth and opportunity unequal treatment and restriction limits the hope and development of minority. When the concept of "race worldview" propagates that blackness is unable to obtain the success, it bloods into self-images of them even as children, creating a self-fulfilling prophesy before their life and even have begun (Smedley 1999:697). Even if there are people who escape from the failure of the attitude imposed in childhood, they still have a "white" mainstream culture through their entire adult life struggle. "Minority youths" absorbs "white" and "black" cultures between the prorogated distinctions, which ultimately undermine their entire life possibilities of accessing succeed (Smedley: 697) in 1999. Unfortunately, today's era has brought little change, such as the New Orleans’ Demond, who has “artistic potential as a gifted opportunity for professional development.” However, the hope was about his talent could open up possibilities that could potentially take him. (Perry:109) The difficulty of the low status of minority is far beyond the race. Unfortunately, inequality of opportunity, being oppressed and “racist” has instigated a vicious circle. According to these escape requirements, these minor "race" does not have the resources. Shoppers are now profiled in their economic status and the "race" of the important factors in the consumerism of the United States, but unfortunately, the low status of the minority is placed at the bottom of the society. Meanwhile, the prospect for the future is not good, and the change is on the horizon for the "race" of the idea has finally been thoroughly examined. Through introspection into American society, changes for the better can