Tuesday 18 September 2012

Draft


Social 10-1 Position Paper
By: Ronni Burrows

Introduction:

The greatest challenge we face today is ensuring that globalization becomes a positive force among all the people in the world, but what will happen years from now? The movie Avatar; created by James Cameron, shows a comparable attribute between our historical globalization, where we are now, and what has yet still to come. This movie has rooted a large amount of messages and hidden judgments of what our world has been doing to past civilizations. As well, what we might continue to do if we don’t grasp into each other’s diversities and try to work with what we have. While exploring this essay, I’ll be contrasting Avatar to historical moments in time, including cultural contact, ethnocentrism and the thoughts of “White Man’s Burden”, according to Rudyard Kipling, and how it all relates to the aspects of globalization.

Body#1 Cultural Contact

Clashes between cultures and civilizations have happened throughout time in our humanity. In the movie, Avatar, humans and unfamiliar species are forced together by venture. Set on the planet of Pandora, Sky People are sent out to threaten the existence of the local tribe, Na’vi and take what they call unobtanium, a valuable mineral that would give the Sky People a quantity of money. How does that relate to our world?  In our North American history, Europeans were dispersed out to settle land, and during that time the Europeans discovered, “savages,” “people of the land,” and what we know them as now, First Nations’. Like portrayed in the movie, Sky People also referred the Na’vi as ‘savages’ and  they were known for their relationship to the land just like the First Nations. In our past, Europeans interrogated First Nations’ land and found a place in their civilization without the approval of the First Nations people. They took what resources the “savages’” had and traded for Europeans’ wants. Now looking from beginning to end into now, our worlds have differed. Cultures merge and unite to create a society where people of different ethnicities can share and they can be their own individual identity or collective identity. What we can call creating a mix of 2 different cultures crafting a new one; hybridization. An illustration of hybridization was shown during Avatar when the bodies of Jake and a few other trained individuals are made into a combination of their previous human body and a mix of Avatar. Also when Avatars and Sky People acculturated and adapted to one another’s traditions. In the end, only a few Sky People were chosen to stay since not all were willing to accommodate. Which brings me to my next point, ethnocentrism.
         
Body #2 Ethnocentrism

While many people recognize the problem, they may not know that ethnocentrism occurs everywhere and every day in our civilization. We all are born into a human culture, and it is the culture that shapes our self-awareness and understanding of other individuals. Ethnocentrism is a key reason for the division amongst groups in our societies today and in our past. Long ago, Europeans oversaw other races and marginalized them to a lesser importance.  Traces of this sense of European ethnocentrism are still evident today. In the film, Na’vi fought heavily armed machines with bows and arrows, which displays the difference in their tradition and also displays how much more powerful the Sky People felt they were compared to the Na’vi. Today, we all are ethnocentric when we use our cultural standards to make generalizations about other peoples' cultures and customs. For example, as stated by Southern Nazarene University, most Canadians and Americans often talk about British drivers driving "on the wrong side" of the road. Why not just say "opposite side" or even "left hand side"? With most current events such as the ongoing war and terror, it is difficult for some members of our civilization to think of the “less civilized” nations as anything but oversimplified labels. What I believe Avatar becomes about is the intention to show that the western world’s society should advance itself into learning more about those who it looks down upon, because they may be able to teach us invaluable lessons about things we do not yet know anything about. We can’t all be considered the best ethnicity, and some people won’t ever be able to accept that.

Body#3 White Mans’ Burden

 “If it isn’t broken, don’t fix it,” a quote that the public use all the time in our civilization. Humans’ appear to give the urge to improve things that aren’t in need of improvement. White Mans’ Burden, a term spoken by Rudyard Kipling, a meaning implying that an ethnicity feels they have the responsibility or duty to take care of another race. In the film Avatar, the Sky People believe that it was there obligation to give the Na’vi people schools and teach them English. That somehow the Na’vi weren’t adequate enough before the Sky People showed up. It is also portrayed in the motion picture that they are in need of someone else to save them in the end, someone that isn’t one of their own ethnicity.. but why didn’t the film receive the message as the Avatars saving themselves? In our past, a lot of what has happened to our world has been because of a “White Man’s Burden.” One’s own ethnicity believes it’s okay to assimilate another culture, that marginalizing another race was of their best interest. Being a part of a European background, I’ve learned lots about colonialism and looking at my own educational knowledge, I can relate back to when the Europeans decided the First Nations needed to assimilate and learn their ways. Europeans also brought the education of English and residential schools to their lands when they didn’t get the option.( dont know how to end this paragraph)

Conclusion (continue working on)

Our world has suffered many implications in its existence. It has many hidden messages we still need to discover and release. While writing this essay, I leave you with these questions. Which ones were the savages, who was the terrorists, and who were the uncivilized?

3 comments:

  1. I really really like your introduction. It ties everything together perfectly and touches on all the key points of your essay!

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  2. You could attempt to add into your third paragraph your opinion on the actions of the Europeans. If you want, you could add your other ideas into ethnocentrism because it shows conflicting sides of the story and how the humans thought the natives were easily killed and would go easily. I really like the usage of the quote in paragraph three. Parts of paragraph 1 don't really tie in well, but you could probably tie them in with another well worded sentence or two. It is really good!

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