This paper studies aspects related to a local Dia De Los Muertos event.
Analytical Essay # 126286 |
1,250 words (
approx. 5 pages ) |
2 sources |
MLA | 2008
|
$ 25.95
More information
|
Add to cart
Abstract
In this article, the writer presents detailed notes on who and what groups of people attended a local Dia De Los Muertos event. How the people behaved what they wore how they interacted with one another using language and other forms of communication and additional anthropological observations are presented. Quotes from willing consultants are provided to help explain the perspectives behaviors and experiences of the event from the participant's point of view.
From the Paper
"The following presents detailed notes on who and what groups of people attended a local Dia De Los Muertos event. How the people behaved what they wore how they interacted with one another using language and other forms of communication and additional anthropological observations are presented. Quotes from willing consultants are provided to help explain the perspectives behaviors and experiences of the event from the participant's point of view. Thus an ethnographic account of the event to include a description of the event and ..."
Tags:class
An explanation and description of Aztec festivals.
Term Paper # 145011 |
1,507 words (
approx. 6 pages ) |
3 sources |
MLA | 2010
|
$ 29.95
More information
|
New! Look inside the paper
|
Add to cart
Abstract
This paper describes an Aztec festival, known as Dia de los Muertos, which has in recent years been combined with the Mexican Day of the Dead. It explains some of the traditions involved in these festivals and explains how the Day of the Dead celebration serves as a strong psychological and spiritual function to help family members cope with loss and death.
From the Paper
''Imagery of skulls (calveras) and skeletons (calacas) pervades a Dia de los Muertos celebration. Parades are common. Individual families will also construct temporary altars for the Day of the Dead. Photos and memorabilia of dead relatives are placed on the altar along with food offerings. Therefore, the Day of the Dead is not a monolithic holiday; it consists of several different celebrations all joined together by a common theme.
''The observed Day of the Dead celebration combined communal and private ceremonies. The events took place in a small city of about 20,000 people in Southern California with a predominantly Mexican population. The town's socio-economic demographic is working class; abject poverty is not evident but buildings are dilapidated and there is little income disparity. Most of the residents of the community work in one of the three major industries nearby including agriculture, wastewater treatment, and light industries.
''The Dia de los Muertos celebrations are for everyone. Age variation is striking and speaks to the essence of the holiday, which is based on the honoring of family lineages and multiple generations. Focus on the continuity of life is a central theme of El Dia de los Muertos.''
Tags:indigenous, celebrations, holiday
A look at the failures of the Denver International Airport luggage handling system.
Term Paper # 125060 |
2,500 words (
approx. 10 pages ) |
46 sources |
APA | 2008
|
$ 45.95
More information
|
Add to cart
Abstract
This paper describes the massive failure of the Denver International Airport baggage handling system, identifying major factors leading to the failure and explaining how the system could have been developed better.
From the Paper
"The Denver International Airport (DIA) is twice the size of Manhattan at ... square miles and was designed to be the USA's largest airport. (Montealegre Keil) Due to the airport's unusual size, the City of Denver realized that baggage handling would be a critical issue and that the individual airlines could not address it adequately. (Montealegre Keil) The city determined to incorporate an airport-wide baggage handling system predicated on information technology, IT, that could handle luggage in a dramatically more efficient..."
Tags:Denver, luggage, baggage, baggage handling system, computer, system, project, DIA, airport, Denver International Airport, problems, size, complexity
This paper describes the purpose of the U.S. Department of Defense Intelligence Agency, or the DIA.
Research Paper # 95082 |
1,847 words (
approx. 7.4 pages ) |
3 sources |
APA | 2007
|
$ 35.95
More information
|
Add to cart
Abstract
This paper examines the U.S. Department of Defense Intelligence Agency, or DIA, whose original purpose was to coordinate the intelligence activities of the military services. The paper further describes some of the problems encountered by the agency due to its secretive function and competition among other intelligence organizations. These problems are analyzed in light of the agencies purpose and military affiliation. The paper concludes by illustrating the DIA's renaissance in the mid-1990's with the appointment of John M. Deutch as its new Director of Central Intelligence.
From the Paper
"The DIA's history is a speckled one at best. Initially it was a rather obscure organization with very little real power. The reason for this was because it was supposed to be a coordinator of information gathered by other agencies, and even though the agencies were military in nature, as was the DIA, there was still a myriad of problems in gathering the respective data from those individual agencies. The agencies jealously protected their information, thereby rendering moot the DIA's attempts at clarification and enhancement of the data it was charged with coordinating."
Tags:Department, of, Defense, Intelligence, John, M., Deutch, DIA
Shamanic Seance
An examination of the the construction of the category of the shaman in anthropological literature.
Research Paper # 51946 |
5,411 words (
approx. 21.6 pages ) |
21 sources |
MLA | 2004
|
$ 79.95
More information
|
Add to cart
Abstract
This paper examines two ethnographies relating to shamanic activity, Desjarlais? (1994) "Body and Emotions" and Taussig?s (1987), "Shamanism, Colonialism and the Wild Man". It attempts to show through their review how the literature on shamanism often proves more instructive in understanding the discourses of Otherness in anthropological and other writings. It also looks at what the physiological understandings of trance bring to our understandings of shamanism.
Outline
Shamans for Sale, a Dia(bolical?)lectical Image
A Short History of Emotion
The Fracturing of the World
Magia Pinta
From the Paper
"In the late 1980's, Desjarlais did fieldwork among the Yolmo Sherpa, a Tibetan people living in the Helambu region of north central Nepal. During the year he was in the region, he was apprenticed the veteran healer Meme. During this time, Desjarlais also underwent trance states. He does not claim these to be a photographic equivalent of the shaman's own trance state, rather, he emphasises the degree to which the healing process is grounded in the everyday physical movements of life, what one could term habitus . This is not directly accessible through discourse or exegesis - rather, it could be thought of as an unspoken archive, of sedimented, embodied history. Paralleling Desjarlais? analysis, this essay will first briefly examine the habitus from which Desjarlais analysis stems."
Tags:ecstasy, embodiment, healing, surrealism, trance
Analyzes ethnic conflict resolution and policy in contemporary Africa, especially Ethiopia.
Term Paper # 106829 |
15,860 words (
approx. 63.4 pages ) |
36 sources |
APA | 2008
|
$ 174.95
More information
|
New! Look inside the paper
|
Add to cart
Abstract
This paper identifies key elements in conflict and conflict resolution theories from the perspectives of ethnicity, culture, and politics in Africa and non-African countries. The author points out that Africa has been wracked time and time again by wars of all types, intensities and durations. The author then presents several ways that Africans resolve ethnic conflict and reports that, unique among African countries, the ancient Ethiopian monarchy maintained its freedom from colonial rule with the exception of the 1936-41 Italian occupation during World War II. However, Ethiopia has been wracked by a series of bloody coups, uprisings, wide-scale drought and massive refugee problems.
Table of Contents:
Theory
Key Historical and Contemporary Theorist
Conflict Theories and African Policy Issues
Frustration-Aggression Hypothesis
Social Learning Theory
Social Identity Theories
Implementation of Ethnic Conflict Management and Policy
Community Assembly: The Semai Becharaa'
Qat-Chewing Sessions
The Role of Poetry
Dia
Go-Between Mediator
Apology
Truth and Reconciliation Commissions
Public Trials
Reparations Payments
Writing a Common History
Track II Diplomacy
Literature Review
Global Ethnic Resolution, Conflict and Relevant Policy
African Ethnic Conflict and Policy
Application of Theory and Practice on Ethiopia
Ethnic Conflict Resolution and Theories within a Policy Context
Ethiopian Socioeconomic and Political Climate
From the Paper
"The native inhabitants of the area were organized in agrarian-based chiefdoms like those of the Bench and Dizi people (living in the highlands) or in decentralized age-grade societies like the Toposa, Anyuak, Nyangatom and Suri (living in the lowland plains). The state presence was constituted by superior military force (soldier contingents with better arms), and by the imposition on the locals of tribute and tax requirements, and the obligation to provide corvee agricultural labor for the northern immigrants. The latter also took cattle, ivory and slaves for trade to the north."
Tags:frustration-aggression, social identity, single-mindedness consensus regional
A discussion on how Pagan rituals have evolved into Christian tradition, specifically Halloween.
Research Paper # 93691 |
1,050 words (
approx. 4.2 pages ) |
6 sources |
MLA | 2007
|
$ 22.95
More information
|
Add to cart
Abstract
The paper describes how, before the Spaniards arrived in North America, there were flourishing communities of Mayans and Aztecs, with a thriving tradition of sun worship. The paper examines how Halloween and the Day of the Dead share a common origin in the Christian commemoration of the dead on All Saints' and All Souls' Day. The paper further examines how Catholic tradition is partly based upon Celtic Pagan rituals.
From the Paper
"On the second day, the celebration is directed toward the adult deceased. They are thanked for their protection, and respectfully asked to continue bringing prosperity and grace to the family. The family welcomes the souls of the deceased into their homes to visit. Small alters, called offrendas, are constructed and all kinds of lovely things decorate them, including tiny sugar favors made in animal shapes, happy skulls, skeletons, bouquets of flowers and family photographs."
Tags:Mexican, Dia, de, los, Muertos, Conquistadors, gravesite, Latino