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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 10 page paper reviews this book about Africa. Several quotes are included. No additional sources cited.
Page Count:
10 pages (~225 words per page)
File: RT13_SA616Bas.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
cultures are clearly more enigmatic, but not only that, there is a tendency to want to fix things, even if they are not broken. This is sometimes associated with the
arrogance of the west. People want to change things just because they appear to be primitive. Some change is good, but others destroy cultural aspects of the native culture. Of
course, in Africa, poverty prevails and it is hard to argue that poverty is good. People try to mend the problem with small donations, some instruction and an attempt at
a solution. They simply throw money at the problem or use ideas that are not fully developed. Yet, these attempts often fall short. Of course, sometimes things are not
what they seem. Bass (1990) examines African culture only to find that while there is a resistance to Western ideas, there is a beauty that should be appreciated. Amidst the
rubble and the chaos that is the epitome of the starvation that exists there, there is beauty and a sense of awe. Nature is everywhere waiting to show the world
why things are the way they are and why it is not always right to change them. Few do not appreciate that sentiment when examining the beauty in nature.
According to a student writing on this subject, Bass (1990) provides many examples of the fact that Western scientific notions and development are irrelevant, and even inappropriate, when putting African
life into meaningful social and cultural context. This is no surprise. The idea that Western progress is progress at all is one that is certainly debatable. In fact, progress is
somewhat of an arrogant idea. It is a "loaded" word that suggests the more natural contexts of less developed countries are simply not as good as the world that is
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