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Extra Credit 1 pg , 1 pt , 1 wk Female Presidents

Extra Credit 1 pg , 1 pt , 1 wk Female Presidents

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Extra Credit 1 pg , 1 pt , 1 wk Female Presidents

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  1. Extra Credit 1 pg, 1 pt, 1 wk Female Presidents Write a paper highlighting the challenges and accomplishments of TWO female presidents and prime ministers. What obstacles did they face during election and during their time in office, and what were some of the notable contributions and successes of their administrations?

  2. Extra Credit1 pg, 1 pt, 1 wk Project Implicit https://implicit.harvard.edu/implicit/demo/selectatest.html Take the Race IAT exam and at least one other IAT. Print out the results pages, and on the back of each page, write a set of field notes (just like the ones for Assignment 7).

  3. Extra Credit 1 pg, 1 pt, 1 wk Choose one musician from the list below, and write a paper detailing how their music influenced politics? Vuyisile Mini VusiMahlasela Hugh Masekela Miriam Makeba Sophie Mgcina

  4. Extra Credit 1 pg, 1 pt, 1 wk “Let’s Talk about Sex” Compare the sexual outlook of teenagers in the U.S. and the Netherlands as portrayed in the documentary.

  5. Extra Credit 1 pg, 1 pt, 1 wk “The Science of Sex Appeal” How does the documentary explain the phenomenon of physical attraction?

  6. Extra Credit2 pages, 2 points, 2 weeks“CSA: Confederate States of America”or“Black/White” In your own words, provide an OBJECTIVE summary of either of these documentaries.

  7. Typologies of Race, Ethnicity, etc. Race = Face. One’s physical features resulting solely from genetic ancestry. May or may not include size and build. Racial typologies break down facial features into anywhere from 2 to more than 20 racial categories in rare cases. These are culturally—not scientifically—assigned categories. Ethnicity: Socially constructed categories pointing to culture (learned behavior). Language, religion, music, table (or no table) manners, etc.. Nationality: One’s citizenship; the name of one’s country. Sometimes crosses over into ethnicity (Palestinian, Kurd, Navaho, Hmong, Okinawan, Sinhalese, Tibetan, Inuit, etc.). Nativity: The act of being born somewhere.

  8. Prevalent Supremacies Today Castism/Racism: The effect of someone’s facial or other inherited physical features on your behavior towards them. Often has a highly ethnic dimension. Characterized by few categories. Colorism: Within groups that consider themselves to be racially or ethnically homogeneous, variable skin color affects resulting behavior. Characterized by many categories. Nationalism: The effect of someone’s flag, citizenship, or allegiance to political groups on your behavior towards them. Nativism/Colonialism: The effect of being (or not being) from the cultural setting in which an encounter takes place. Often has a highly ethnic dimension and is intertwined with racism. Sexism: The effect of someone’s physical and/or behavioral aspects of their sexuality on your behavior towards them.

  9. Racism in state-level societies Normalization of racism Propensity for racism at the individual level Institutionalized racism Frequency and intensity of racist rituals

  10. Differentiation Conflict Hierarchy Oppression

  11. Military Capability Cultural Vitality Richard Delgado “Only our whites are Americans; the restof us have to hyphenate.” As England’s overcrowded populationemigrated, they usually called themselvesby the term they used for the lands they colonized. They became Americans, Afrikaners, Australians, New Zealanders, etc.. This didn’t happen in places where the colonized people had a military history comparable to Great Britain’s (e.g., China/Hong-Kong, Egypt, India, Iraq, Malaysia, Oman, Singapore, Spain).

  12. Martin Luther King(1929 – 1968) • 1947: Ordained minister • 1955: Rosa Parks and other activists kindle the US Civil Rights Movement. King captures the attention of the public eye at 25. • 1963: Medgar Evers murdered. King delivers “I Have a Dream...” speech. • 1964: Awarded Nobel Peace Prize • 1965: “We Shall Overcome” • 1968: “Mountaintop”

  13. Malcolm X(1925 – 1965) • 1930s & 40s: Detroit Red, Lansing Red, Rhythm Red. • 1946 – 1952: Prisoner 21669. • 1953: Public speaker for Elijah Muhammad’s Nation of Islam. • 1963: Leaves Nation of Islam and converts to (Sunni) Islam. • 1965: Assassinated by Nation of Islam members.

  14. Fred Hampton(1948 – 1969) 1966: Junior Achievement Award for organizing food rallies and educational/recreational programs in Chicago. 1967: Youth Council Leader for NAACP. 1968: Speaker for the Black Panthers. Dec. 4, 1969: Assassinatedby FBI and Chicago PD. Dec. 4, 1990: Fred Hampton Day declared in Chicago.

  15. Tyisha Miller (1979 – 1998) • Dec. 28: Miller (19) was shot by four police officers 27 times within the alleged span of “3 seconds as she sat in her aunt’s car at a gas station on a well-traveled intersection.” • Salonews/Salon.comPE.com

  16. In-class Exercise Having heard both King and X, see if you can hear the echoes of their words in the following video. How do they vary (what variables are evident)? How can these variables be measured? What can be learned from a cohort study of this type? How has racism in the US changed between the 19th century (1800s) and the 21st? What factors influenced some of the topics being discussed? How were they resolved, if at all? Subjective: How did this experience affect you?

  17. Vuyisile Mini(1920 – 1964) 1952 – 1958: Jailed for “Defiance Campaign” Throughout the early resistance, he was the key figure in South African liberation music. 1964: Executed. Nelson Mandela imprisoned.

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