Tuesday, April 23, 2013
Untouchable- Essay #2 (Rough Draft)
Well, it's not organized yet, but I'm getting there.
Tentative Thesis:
In Untouchable, Anand describes how Bakha adopts a false consciousness, trying to live up to the life of the Englishmen instead of identifying with his own Hindu culture. He adopts a false consciousness by wanting to learn how to read and write as the English do (since his low place in the caste system didn't allow him to do so), by trying to play hockey (an english sport) and by being exposed to the English culture and religion as he lives with Colonel Hutchinson (pg 130, quote sandwich could be made on this point) . The ideology of the caste system reflects upon race and class (key term?) in India.
Supporting claims (paragraphs that should follow the thesis):
How each of the following:
1. learning how to write
2. playing hockey
3. being exposed to a different religion (pg 130)
magnify and affect false consciousness in Bahka. Expand and clarify and I can use key terms from racial formation here
Other thoughts:
In various points of the novel, we also see how Bakha's false consciousness evolves and changes throughout. We see how significant it is to Bakha to want to escape the unfairness of his own culture by trying to adopt the English culture, and we see how trying to adopt a new culture and neglect affects his own identity.
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Intersectionality can be used to analyze how the ideology of the caste system works. We see that in the novel, Bakha is a sweeper and is looked upon as a filthy person but when he accidentally bumps into someone above him in the caste system, he is bemoaned and insulted for not announcing that he was passing by. We also see that Bakha steps into a temple/shrine and when he is seen, he is insulted over and over for desecrating the temple, but when he realizes that the priest of the temple molested his sister, we see that Bakha cannot do anything about it, simply because the priest is higher than him in the caste system. Bakha experiences intense discrimination, and his own people, people who live in the same country and who are Hindu like he is, still discriminate him, simply for being different than him.
Monday, April 22, 2013
In Retrospect...
This cluster has impressed me from beginning to end. Sometimes it is hard to make connections with each class in the cluster, but in the end it all ties into each other. We see how slavery was back in the day and we also see how sometimes the effects of slavery ring true in today's world. Topics that we talk about in each class seem to always intertwine with each other. Talking about race and culture in each of the three classes make me critically think about what race and culture really mean to me. Not a day goes by where I ride the train and try to see people and their cultures and not identify them solely by their race. I see how linguistics and accents are a part of different cultures in NY and I see how different we all are and instead of dismissing the differences I learn to acknowledge them. Instead of judging people by their race, I acknowledge them as equals. Now I see how different races and cultures influence me and the world around me. Suddenly, I no longer feel the need to use the term "n**ga" as a term of endearment since I am now aware of the implications of the term. Now, I am able to be socially and culturally aware of the people around me. We all live on the same floating rock we call Earth, and learning about wat I have learned in these classes lets me see that maybe we aren't black or latino or hispanic or white or dark skinned. Maybe we are all those things.
Maybe we are all just human after all.
Maybe we are all just human after all.
Tuesday, April 16, 2013
Twitter goes educational, political, and more
Overall, I was impressed by the new twitter handles we were
exposed to. They provide information about society and things that are going
on, ranging from politics to the prison system as well. Although some provide
more information than others (BAMN provides a lot, and I mean a lot of thank
you’s in their recent tweets), but mostly they provide thought-provoking
dialogue and articles that make us think differently of our own lives. I am a
favorite of @lobojost's blog because it hits so close to home (since I live in
the Bronx myself) and he talks about things that happen that I would have never
even thought about until I would be older. He talks about housing, education,
economic justice and anti-systemic-racism organizing, and I have never really thought
about those things, so his sources provide me with a background of what really
goes on in the Bronx. I honestly don't think that I would have found these
twitter handles by myself, but being exposed to them helps me learn more about
what I don't really know. I am not convinced that twitter is a legitimate way
to have interesting conversations, mainly because of the limited characters one
can type to each other. Interesting conversations would most likely be more
than 140 characters, and people would probably prefer to have longer and
extended conversations, as they would be able to on a blog or on a chat, but
twitter makes it easy to share information, and the speed in which one can do
so provides a lot of sources for one to look through. These twitter handles provide a great array of information that I would have never been exposed to and which provide me a new perspective in my life.
Tuesday, April 9, 2013
Racial Profiling in regards to Muslims
The chart "Anti Islamic Hate Incidents, 1995-2008" demonstrates how hate crimes against people of Islamic origin contrasts between those specific time periods. It also shows the rise of hate crimes throughout the 2000's. This data is important because it shows how the rise of the incidents affected the Muslim people throughout the years and how racial profiling affected them too. This chart ties to the events of 9/11 and how racial profling and hate crimes increased due to the fact that the perpetrators of the horrendous act were muslim themselves. This act of terror shed a very judgmental and negative light on Muslims around the world, even though it was an isolated act in which only a few Muslims were involved. In contrast, Muslims are very peaceful people and do not want to cause any harm to Americans. But as the the group Al-Qaeda carried out the act, Muslims around the world had to pay and suffer through humiliation caused by Al-Qaeda and withstood racial incidents since then. Although racial tension between Americans and Muslims have lessened since the incident, one cannot help but wonder when we will be truly be able to accept them.
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