LAST 201 Response to “Final thoughts: the Eternaut and Malafalda”

 

I guess I jumped the gun last week, saying that it was going to be my last blog for this course. So, I apologize for that. This weeks blog is going to be my last blog for this course. As I said earlier in my previous blog, this course has been a welcome surprise. And this weeks readings has definitely been one. I am a little embarrassed to say this but I think that this might be the only week in which I finished all the readings.

Of the two comic strips, I enjoyed “The Eternaut” the most. Mostly because it had more of a mature feel to it. However, I did very much enjoy the plot line and suspense surrounding the comic. I’m a little unsure as to whether or not this comic was published in other languages worldwide because I feel like I read this comic before. If not this, then something very, very similar. As for “Malafalda” I enjoyed how the comic strip talked about real, ongoing issues. When reading the about page I came across this that I found particularly important : “She (Malfalda) spoke to a community that needed to question the state of the world but lived in a time when it was safest for a fictional child to do the questioning.” Just through this sentence alone, we can see the importance Malfalda played in Argentina. All too often, we regard comics as a way to incite laughter. However, in this situation, we see the authors of Malfalda use her character to engage the community to think about issues that plague their community.

Anyways, to end things off, I just want to say that I enjoyed this class and the content I learned. Making a few friends in this class was also a welcome bonus that I wasn’t planning on having. Thanks guys!

Group Dynamics

During this semester, we took organizational behavior and put it to the test. With our small group setting as our organization, we worked together for three months. With Professor Wayne Rawcliffe’s guidance, we had a meeting solely for the purpose of getting to know each other better. We didn’t talk about homework, school, or work. It was purely about understanding them and listening to their life story. With the conclusion of our first team meeting, I believe that our group took a step in the right direction.

As time went on and we constructed a contract to solidify the do’s and the don’ts of the group, we started on our first assignment and began our journey through the five-stage model of group development. By constructing the contract and having our introductory meeting, we had completed the forming stage and moved onto the storming stage. A stage in which we clarified individual roles, responsibilities and got a general feel of how each person worked. Although there were some bumps along the way, I think our group performed well together and we were able to finish the assignment promptly and efficiently. Nevertheless, we went over the issues that appeared during the duration of the project in class and resolved any lasting doubt. By committing time to resolve any potential conflicts, we moved on from the storming stage and to the norming stage.

With the first assignment under our belts, we were introduced to another assignment, one that would account for 30% of our grade. Having everyone understand the importance of this assignment was integral to our group’s performance, so to see that everyone saw this as important made tackling the assignment so much easier. With everyone understanding each other’s strengths, weaknesses, responsibilities, and roles, we were able seamlessly move from the norming stage to the performing stage. Throughout the assignment, because of the free flow of information, I sensed a gradual shift of attitude which made me really appreciate my group. I could feel the lowering of walls as everyone acknowledged each other not as team mates but as friends. It was at this moment that I knew that once we completed this assignment, we would have reached the fifth and final stage, adjourning.

Response to “The End of Popular Culture?”

 

Well, well, well. After three months, we have finally approached the end of this course. During this time, I can honestly say that I learned a lot. It got to the point where I telling my girlfriend about Peronism in Argentina. I’m not a big culture guy so for me to enjoy this course speaks a lot about this course. Looking at the title I can see that we have come full circle in regards to the topic. From “what is culture” to the “theories of mixture” and now to “the end of popular culture?”.

When reading Guillermo Gomez-Pena’s “In Search of a New Topography”, the first thing that came to mind was Big Foot. Big Foot came up first because of all the mystery surrounding it. Like Marco, Big Foot is something that became engrained in popular culture even though no one really knew what it looked like. Furthermore, if Big Foot was actually revealed, the mysticism surrounding Big Foot would disappear and the intrigue would disappear, just like what happened to Marco after he revealed himself to be just an ordinary citizen from Northern Mexico. For me, it just goes to show that once the mystery gets answered, interest surrounding this elusive object subsides.

When reading Mary C. Beltran’s “The Hollywood Latina Body as Site of Social Struggle: Media Constructions of Stardom and Jennifer Lopez’s ‘Cross-Over Butt’”, I found this article particularly interesting because it talks about how Hollywood is a white-dominated industry. “It also is notable that direct mention of Lopez’s ethnicity appears to have been downplayed in the English-language press during this period, while it unsurprisingly was emphasized in the Spanish-language press” This sentence perfectly resembles what it is like to be a minority in Hollywood. Hollywood would normalize Lopez by emphasizing her upbringing in the Bronx, as opposed to her Puerto Rican heritage. Although Hollywood has incorporated more minorities in recent years, it has largely stayed a white industry.

And with this, I conclude my last blog. LAST 201 has been a pleasant surprise not only in terms of the class but also the material. It’s been real guys and I wish everyone the best of luck on the finals!

Response to Hybridity

 

The last “Theory of Mixture”, hybridity. I always thought that we talked about hybridity because in my notes, hybridity meant the combining of two cultures. However, it might have just been me taking the wrong notes. Anyways, I do know that hybridity is something we’ve talked periodically in class. Rowe and Schelling talked about it in “The Faces of Popular Culture”, Mark Millington talked about it in “Transculturation: Contrapuntal Notes to Critical Orthodoxy” and now we have Nestor Garcia Canclini talk about it in “Hybrid Cultures: Strategies for Entering and Leaving Modernity.”

In “Hybrid Cultures: Strategies for Entering and Leaving Modernity”, Nestor Garcia Canclini unpacks the meaning behind the hefty word, hybridization. The reason why hybridization is heavy is because people group everything that involves mixing under the umbrella of hybridization. That is why some authors warned about grouping everything under one term. Furthermore, it should be emphasized that hybridity is not limited to the biological dynamics from which the concept is derived from. In the article, Nestor talks about how hybridity at times occurs in an unplanned manner or is the unforeseen result of processes of migration, tourism, and economic or communicational exchange. However, he notes that hybridity often emerges from individual and collective creativity. Either through the arts or technological development in everyday life. Nestor further explains this by saying hybridization is a way “one seeks to reconvert a heritage or resource in order to reintegrate it to new conditions of production and distribution.” I found this definition to be particularly true because in my view, hybrids exist to be something better than the original. For example, hybrid cars are meant to be more fuel efficient than normal gasoline cars, hybrid fruits are made to be more fresh and better tasting than the original.

I haven’t gotten a chance to read the entire article yet but these are my two cents. It was definitely an engaging article and it did demystify the difference between hybridity and hybridization.

Reactions to Popular Culture as Mass Culture

 

When I first signed up for this course, I thought that we were going to talk about Latin American pop artists, football, and movies. But low and behold, we ended up talking about something almost completely different from what I thought we were going to study. That’s not to say I didn’t enjoy learning about the history of Latin America and what it has gone through to become the region it is today. For this week’s readings, we finally touch upon popular culture as mass culture. To be honest, if you were to ask me before the start of this class on the difference between mass culture and popular culture, I would probably not have been able to come up with an answer. In my mind, I thought that what was popular must have appealed to the masses as well. However, throughout the course, I have been proven wrong time and time again.

In Nelson Hippolyte Ortega’s “Big Snakes on the Street and Never Ending Stories: The Case of Venezuelan Telenovas”, I found it interesting how something predominantly Latin American was able to be popular in many places elsewhere. In the first sentence, Nelson sums up what the telenova means to Latin America. “The telenova is an important expression of Latin American popular culture not only because of its success with the public, but also because it reflects the public’s symbolic and affective world. I am informed on how that the difference between North American soap opera and traditional telenova is the motive. In North American soap operas, the central motivations are money and sex whereas in traditional telenovas, the motivation is to fall in love, marry and have children. During my readings, it occurred to me that for the first half of this course, we talked about how Latin America borrowed elements of different cultures in order to make their own. However, with telenovas, we see how North America drew inspiration from Latin America and tried to recreate it for their own audiences.

I wasn’t able to finish “Futebol: The Brazilian Way of Life” by Alex Bellos, but I am excited to talk about it in class and learn more about it!

Theories of Mixture II

Part two of Theories of Mixture! So, in the first part, we talked about mestizaje and its implications. What it meant, how it was achieved and how it was important to Latin American culture. Now, in the second part, we are introduced to a somewhat new topic. Transculturation. We somewhat touched upon this topic in class in which we said transculturation was how two cultures (e.g. indigenous and Spanish) assimilated various elements of each other’s culture to make something fresh.

In Mark Millington’s readings, he mentioned how mestizaje has now become generally confined to discussions of racial mixing while transculturation and hybridization where more in favor nowadays. However, he drew a clear distinction on how while transculturation and hybridization are similar, they mean different things. Transculturation, he said had a distinct Latin American identity and was rarely employed outside that context. On the other hand, hybridization had a more global reference to it. Although I have yet to fully unpack the difference of the two meanings in a way that I can understand, I definitely find this area of topic interesting. Maybe because the length of the readings were a bit more manageable.

I found that this reading had a few similar ideas that Rowe & Schelling talked about in their “The Faces of Popular Culture”. For example, Rowe & Schelling talked about how Mexico had their process of acculturation be more complete. I will need to reread the two readings but this is what I have for now! Thanks for reading guys!

Diversity

Trump’s recent executive order to ban residents of seven predominately Muslim countries from entering the United States made me remember the importance of diversity. In the age in which people are migrating to different countries, the ability to accept the cultures they bring over is important. In Kathy Gao’s blog “Proactive for Diversity- and why it is necessary in today’s world: PART II” she talks about how diversity is not just ethnical or gender based, it encompasses much more than that. She drew examples from her Comm292 group in which there were members from four culturally different countries.

The reason I believe understanding cultures and being culturally diverse is important is because of the benefits they bring to society. Good ideas aren’t limited to one specific region and if we confine ourselves to this scope of thinking, many ideas that were created in recent decades would never have been produced. Personally, I find it extremely interesting on how the more developed countries of the world are very ethnically and culturally diverse while those with less diversity are not as developed. This may be a mere coincidence but there must be some merit behind this association.

I believe organizations are encouraging diversity because of this valuable exchange of ideas. However, with this influx of diversity comes the importance of acceptance. If people are unaccepting of different cultures and alienate people who have values that don’t align with their own, I believe they are also hindering the exchange of ideas. This issue can be seen right now with hundreds of people condemning the executive ban Donald Trump has imposed. I believe diversity is integral to the growth of humanity and without this open and friendly exchange of ideas, we are limiting ourselves .

 

 

LAST 201 Response to Readings

 

Finally! After six weeks, we finally get to the part where we talk about art and its relationship to culture. This was what I thought was culture the entire time… But clearly, I was wrong. In Bruce Campbell’s “Mexican Muralism and the Official Public Sphere”, there was a sentence that struck a chord within me. That sentence was “Mural art falls victim to censorious government officials uncomfortable with the content of images”. I drew parallels with this sentence because it reminded me of how China was and probably still is. I remember my mother telling me that during the Cultural Revolution, many temples, paintings, and books were destroyed. This destruction of culture was also brought forth by the censorious Chinese government.

On page 58, I found the measures taken by the Mexican government to be very similar to the United States. During the Great Depression, Franklin D. Roosevelt commissioned many artists to create public works of art. And in Mexico, the Mexican government commissioned mural art for public housing projects, hospitals, public work projects, and newly constructed buildings. From what I read so far (this may be wrong), I see a very strong tie between Mexico and its murals. Through the ages, as society changes, Mexican muralism also takes on a new public life. I never knew Mexico was that passionate about the arts but after reading this reading, it really opened my eyes. For example, with the SEP, they built 1,159 schools and 455 new libraries in a span of 2 years!! Furthermore, the minister told reporters of El Universal: “It is my conviction that many of our present and modest architectural endeavors will be remembered thanks to the painters who have decorated them. Architects should feel elated at their good fortune at working in the midst of an artistic renaissance.”

Work was Fun

It’s relatively rare for
someone to say that they like their job. All too often nowadays, we hear people complain how their job is stressful, unfulfilling, and just plain boring. While work may be boring and unfulfilling for some, there are some individuals who enjoy their jobs. One of these individuals was Takeshi Kimura, who shared his thoughts about his job in his blog “Day in the Life of a Grocery Store Employee”. In his blog, Takeshi talked about extrinsic and intrinsic motivators and how they influenced his attitude towards work.

Although working at Zara was stressful, it was fulfilling and very enjoyable. I woke up excited to meet my fellow coworkers and accomplish the tasks that lay ahead. The reason I was excited to go to work was probably due to the strong extrinsic and intrinsic motivators. I made a good hourly wage, got bonuses when my department did well, and handled managerial duties which proved to be a good challenge. Furthermore, there were opportunities for advancement. These motivators were the reason why I continued to work hard even after my promotion. I saw the impact I had at the store and was personally invested in making the store a better work environment. However, these motivators were only made available to managers. As sales associates, there really wasn’t much to motivate them. There was no bonus, and no personal satisfaction while working. It was only until I became a part of the management team did I understand why most managers have the “Theory X” mindset. This theory, as explained in chapter 4 of the textbook, states that employees are inclined to dislike work. This was true for my workplace because of our astronomically high rate of turnover.

While I do believe employees who enjoy work produce better, it is sometimes hard to give employees the motivators they need to enjoy work. I believe that motivators come at a cost for businesses and that is the reason why they might be hesitant with providing their employees the motivators they want.

Sources:

Puri, A. (2017). We Have All Been Pronouncing ‘Zara’ Wrong This Whole Time. www.mensxp.com. Retrieved 6 February 2017, from http://www.mensxp.com/fashion/style-trends/29363-we-have-all-been-pronouncing-zara-wrong-this-whole-time.html

LAST 201: Response to the Mestizaje

Before even reading the articles, I was a little confused. Looking at the header in which they were placed under, I couldn’t really grasp what the reading was hinting at. “Theories of Mixture 1: Mestizaje”. I had no clue what that meant. To me, it sounded like a potion book or something of the sort. However, once I got into the reading, it finally came clear to me. When reading “Rethinking Mestizaje: Ideology and Lived Experience” by Peter Wade, the first word that stuck out to me in the text was “Mestizaje”. And it was there that I finally got a definition of that peculiar word. The notion of racial and cultural mixture; that is what mestizaje means. After finding out that, everything seemed to piece together. I understood what this had to do with our course and why I was reading this on a snowy Sunday evening.

Peter Wade’s article went into depth on the history of the mestizaje and how it came about. I found it interesting when it mentioned that mestizaje was an ‘all-inclusive ideology of exclusion’. Which basically meant a system of ideas that appeared to include everyone but excluded blacks and indigenous people. When reading this article, it occurred to me that there was never such a phenomenon when other regions where conquered by the Europeans. However, this might be due to my lack of history knowledge. For example, when the Spaniards conquered the Philippines in 1521, I don’t recall there being any large sharing of cultures. But then again, it might be because I haven’t gotten there yet in this course.

When reading “The Cosmic Race” by Jose Vasconcelos, it seemed to me that he was doing a lot of comparing between the Latins and Anglo-Saxons. He says that “Our age became, and continues to be, a conflict of Latinism and Anglo-Saxonism. Shockingly, after reading the logic behind what he says, I can definitely see where he is coming from.