| To go to the CF 3333 Syllabus, click here | To go to the CF 3333 Schedule,click here |
CF 3333 Clash of Cultures |
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Social Institutions in 1450 |
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Introduction |
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Story: "Yellow Millet Dream" Chinese folklore from the 8th century … Deconstructing the folk tale tells us a lot about the social order. |
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Family, Marriage, and Kinship Nuclear and extended families – extended very common, could be vertical or horizontal or both. Polygamy (both polygyny and polyandry) vs. monogamy Patrilineal, matrilineal, and bilateral kinship – as we move toward 1850, we see more and more bilateral reckoning of kinship Moieties (two divisions within a society), clans (groups claiming descent from a common mythical ancestor), lineages (groups claiming descent from a common known ancestor) Sodalities: non-residential, non-kin groups Age-sets and age-grades Gender groups |
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The Great Dichotomies Egalitarian vs. hierarchical systems Caste vs. class in hierarchical societies Mobility and status – ascribed vs. achieved. A closed system requires a cosmology that supports it! Individual vs. community Corporate "responsibility" vs. individual "identity" Individual "citizenship" vs. membership in a group of "subjects" In 1500, no societies focused on individuals, individualism. Instead, they were focused on the "community," the well-being of the whole. |
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World population in 1500
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Population of World Cities in 1500
Africa
Sub-Saharan Africa
Americas
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Conclusion: Population in 1500 is not randomly distributed over the face of the earth. But, there are hardly any places where there are no people, except Antarctica. Peoples develop/invent different ways of being in "community." |
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