Something that caught my eye was in the beginning of chapter 5 where the author mentions that American scolars do not necessarily refer to the US as a settler nation, even though it was the people that settled on this land that built the US on the backs of the indigenous and slaves. Unfourtunately, that is why racism is such an issue today because America was built on it.
Another interesting passage was how the European settlers were able to claim citizenship within this country but anyone else who trys to enter does not get to do the same. It is such a banged up policy, how even today, people from foreign countries have to go through so much to get into this country be it legally or illegally, when in the beginning, the settlers just came right in and made themselves right at home.
Some of the differences between the way the indiginous peoples ran their culture and the way that the dominant culture run things were interesting. In our dominant western society today, we base everything off of a patrilocal system where the male is dominant (to be more specific, the European American male is dominant), but in the indiginous cultures the women had more power and say of what was going on. In present day America, when a woman is head honcho she is not viewed as being human. She must be an alien because she doesn't need a male to get her business done, and she does not play the helpless woman role that most are trained to. Hillary Clinton is a great example of that. She had all kinds of lables because she was so head strong about what she believed in and she even ran for president. Not many women have acheived themselves in that manner. It seems that within the indiginous cultures the woman was more sacred. She was more than just a producer of children and dinner, she had a purpose.
Wednesday, September 17, 2008
Monday, September 8, 2008
"Native Women in the Labor Force"
Researching Native women in the work force was a bit difficult because for one, it is not something that you hear about on the daily news or on CNN. I had never really thought of Native women as being a part of America's work force, accept for those that assimilated into the dominant culture. The first thing that comes to mind when I think of Native women in the work force, I think of them as being the primary care givers for children, I think of them as being the spiritual beings within the Native society, and I also think of them as being healers. Because of the way society has depicted Natives as being this way, immages of Native women are largely depicted like this.
When looking up information on Native women in the labor force I found that women are not talked about as often as men. Again, the norms of gerder roles plays a large part. The man is the bread winner and the woman is also a provider, but in a different sense. When looking up images, I found one somewhat empowering picture of a Native woman at work. She was a Native American Wonder Woman...yes, a super hero. She was given all of the Americanized characteristics of beauty and she was actually quite buff, and it was her job to save the helpless non mutant humans from the evil villans. This made me laugh because the Native woman was only given great power in a fictional sense as oppose to being shown as a hard worker within American society.
When looking up information on Native women in the labor force I found that women are not talked about as often as men. Again, the norms of gerder roles plays a large part. The man is the bread winner and the woman is also a provider, but in a different sense. When looking up images, I found one somewhat empowering picture of a Native woman at work. She was a Native American Wonder Woman...yes, a super hero. She was given all of the Americanized characteristics of beauty and she was actually quite buff, and it was her job to save the helpless non mutant humans from the evil villans. This made me laugh because the Native woman was only given great power in a fictional sense as oppose to being shown as a hard worker within American society.
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