Wednesday, September 14, 2011

Crash

After watching the film Crash, I have begun to realize how crucial a role racism plays into everyday decisions.  For example, when a minority applies for a job, due to the idea of "affirmative action" that person of minority is most likely the person who is going to the job, regardless of the qualifications of the other applicants.  I never realized how present racial stereotypes are in our unconscious decisions, like when we were talking in the seminar, what happened to me as well as several other people is that we would begin to say something or express an idea, and then when we began to realize the implications of what we were saying, we would have to just stop talking.  Before this film, and probably because I live in such an isolated single-minded town, I never realized that there can be racism within races, it's not always a white person slamming a minority.  In the movie, a Hispanic woman and a Chinese woman were fighting over who was responsible for a car crash, and several derogatory terms were stated from both ends.

Racism has changed a lot in the last half century, for example, to the extent of my knowledge, African Americans aren't terrorized in their own homes by organizations like the KKK. This does not mean that racism is not still a problem in our culture.  There are significant links between social class and race that prove that past actions by previous leaders have still not been resolved, and for this reason, stereotypes and discriminations are still very much present in everyday life.

Racism will always exist, although the level of racism may fluctuate with time or given a certain situation (metaphorically because its not quantifiable data).  For example, during the terrorist attacks on 9/11, Muslims were automatically discriminated against in airports, and anybody with a Middle Eastern background was suspected as a terrorist by the general public.  This happened on a greater scale after Pearl Harbor, and anybody Asian was put into a camp and forced to put up with miserable conditions, regardless of the fact that they had been living in the United States for several years or even if they had been born american citizens.  Because the human race is so greedy and its need to dominate will never leave, racism will always be a present factor in our lives, and it will never be completely eradicated.

Monday, September 12, 2011

Columbus: Hero or Villain?

Columbus is one of the most famous people in history, accompanied with several different perspectives and opinions relating to his famous endeavors.  Columbus was a man of knowledge, expertise, eagerness, and a thirst for fame and power.  In his quest to become one of the most notable figures in history, Columbus was both a political powerhouse, and an arrogant liar.
Columbus devoted his victories and discoveries to the King and Queen, knowing that doing so would increase his favor by the monarchs, and, therefore, he would receive grand titles and hefty sums of money.  According to his journal, Columbus named one of the first islands he discovered Ferdinandina, and another Isabela.  Columbus lied and exaggerated about his findings in the new world, so much so that one of his letters was circulated into public, claiming that “Their Highnesses can see that I (Columbus) will give them as much gold as they may need,” despite the fact that gold was scarce in these newly explored lands.  Regardless, Columbus returned to Spain a hero, and Queen Isabella, the main supporter of Columbus’s expeditions, provided funds that allowed him to continue on several more voyages to the new world.  
After the second voyage, however, things started to work against Columbus’s will.  According to Howard Zinn, valuable resources like gold became so scarce, Columbus enslaved the entire Indian population, and if they did not meet the quota of gold that they were supposed to have acquired in the allotted time,  a copper token hung around their necks was not punched with a hole.  Indians that were found without the hole in their tokens had their hands cut off and bled to death.  Despite Columbus’s considerably villainous efforts, he was still not able to acquire a satisfactory amount of gold, and thus his favor decreased in the monarchy’s eye.  In one of his short works, Eduardo Galeano describes Columbus’s return with the description “hostile murmurs are heard in the salon.  The gold is minimal, and there is not a trace of black pepper, or nutmeg, or cloves, or ginger.”  
By his third voyage, Columbus had become ill, and his hold on authority was slipping.  When reports reached Spain that Columbus’s reign was quickly receding, the King and Queen sent  Francisco de Bobadilla to implement a new, firm governance over the Indians and newly established Spanish colonies (Columbus, 2011).  While doing so, Bobadilla arrested Columbus, and sent him home in shackles.  There, Columbus was incarcerated.  Due to his failing health, however, the King and Queen, out of what may have been pity, restored his previous titles, and relieved him of a trial and punishment.  After one last voyage to the new world, Columbus’s illness quickly overtook him, and he died a questionable hero.  
In his lifetime, Columbus did achieve his goal of becoming a notable figure in history, although some of the reasons for his notability probably weren’t intentional.  Columbus’s desperation to bring home plentiful amounts of gold led him to commit such acts as the massacres of Indians.  But even worse was the lack of justifiability of these acts, when there were so many other precious, useful resources that would have turned out profitable, without resulting in the extermination of a large fraction, and in some cases, the entirety of original Indian populations, such as the Arawaks.   Columbus’s refusal to believe that there was not a significant enough amount of gold in the new world to meet demands brought about the true nature of his arrogance.  
Ironically, Columbus wasn’t completely idolized until years after his death. According to an article on the origins of Columbus day, Columbus was chosen as an idol for the newly populated America in the early eighteenth century because “The human need to explain origins, to create self-identity through national identity, was thwarted by this reluctance (of American Revolution leaders to rise to stardom because of their exploits).  A vacuum was created, and was slowly filled with the image of Christopher Columbus.”  To put it shortly, America needed somebody or something to serve as a fundamental base to grow as a new country.  Because Columbus was “the solitary individual who challenged the unknown sea, as triumphant Americans contemplated the dangers and promise of their own wilderness frontier.” The connection with somebody to build and base a culture off of for this new country was perceptive and realistic, especially due to the fact that in 1829,  Washington Irving published his  work, Life of Columbus, and portrayed Columbus as a “romantic hero.”  America immediately began to idealize and adopt him into its growing society.  According to the same article, America’s “adoption of Columbus magnified his own place in history.”
 And so, years after Columbus died, he grew even more famous to the world and was looked upon as a hero, as a result of our own ignorance towards his malicious endeavors.  
"Columbus after 1493." Glencoe Online. N.p., n.d. Web. 10 Sept. 2011. <http://www.glencoe.com/sec/socialstudies/btt/columbus/after_1493.shtml>.

Monday, September 5, 2011

Bury my Heart at Wounded Knee

This reenactment of the battle of Wounded Knee made me become aware of several facts behind the western movement.  First, I was surprised at some of the types of opinions and methodologies certain white figures stood behind.  I couldn't quite figure out if Senator Dawson was so much an advocate for the Indians or if he simply used them to further his political career.  The accuracy of the historical content also obscured my understanding of some of these actions.  I also found it very interesting that they gave the Indians their own land, with the basic idea of a sovereign nation being implied, but they felt the need to colonize the Indians, broken down into the tiniest details such as having a Christian name.
I also had no idea that the whites separated the area of land given to the Native Americans into agencies.  I thought that this was especially interesting if they wanted the Indians to provide for themselves that they would provide them rations and supplies for so long without even slowly decreasing the rations and showing the Indians how to cultivate whatever they could from the barren land.
Of course from me there is the everlasting "what the hell were we thinking" reaction, lead on by what we forced the Indians to adapt to and how easily we left them to try to make a life out of virtually nothing.  But after watching the events play out in the assassination of Sitting Bull followed my the massacre at Wounded Knee, this reaction was escalated two fold, and although this period spans across generations to me now, I still feel a level of responsibility for what these people had to go through.