community
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community [2020/05/24 18:14] – created Ryan Schram (admin) | community [2021/07/02 05:31] (current) – [Reference] Ryan Schram (admin) | ||
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# Community | # Community | ||
- | No person is an island; there has never been a person born who was not also already part of a larger community. We cannot, then, understand what it means to be human without looking beyond the individual to the larger social environment. Each individual is not only a member of a community, they are a component of that community as a system. | + | No person is an island; there has never been a person born who was not also already part of a larger community. We cannot, then, understand what it means to be human without looking beyond the individual to the larger social environment. Each individual is not only a member of a community, they are a component of that community as a system. |
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+ | Human beings have a social nature. In the same way, humans have an innate capacity to acquire specific patterns from their social environment, | ||
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+ | Claude Levi-Strauss finds this in the problem of the incest taboo. Like human beings, there are many animals | ||
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+ | For Levi-Strauss, | ||
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+ | One can make the same kind of argument about descent, which was another concept developed by anthropologists to explain how many human societies are organized and structured. In many societies that are primarily organized in terms of kinship, people can recall many of their ancestors. Some people in these societies are especially gifted in the art of memory and can recite genealogies for dozens of generations. (In Auhelawa these people are called " | ||
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+ | For most people in a place like Sydney, kinship does not take this kind of political and structural function. One's kinship is usually seen as an extension of one's self. Even if you come from a cultural background in which kinship groups are important, most people are compelled to talk about their kinship relationships in egocentric terms. That does not mean that we cannot see the same kinds of social institutions in this community. Another system of symbolic categories replaces the symbolic categories that define people' | ||
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+ | ## Reference | ||
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+ | Kershaw, Sarah. 2009. “Shaking Off the Shame.” The New York Times, November 25, 2009, sec. Home & Garden. https:// | ||
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+ | <WRAP box similar> |
community.1590369284.txt.gz · Last modified: 2020/05/24 18:14 by Ryan Schram (admin)