Wednesday, October 24, 2012

Faces of America Review

   

The video we watched in class, Faces of America, was actually very interesting and informative. Even with the interviewer's blank face and lack of personality, I found the entire documentary very intriguing. The different celebrity ancestry was just a plus, but I thoroughly  enjoyed learning about how their lives could have changed so drastically if their ancestors did not make the courageous decision to leave their homeland to join the American melting pot. It fascinates me how easily these people could have been living the same lives as the generations before them and be just as miserable. But now they were given the opportunity to thrive as an individual, and show their ancestors that they made the right decision to take that risk. I also thought it was kind of interesting that some of the ancestors to these celebrities, were also very successful for the time, or well known and accounted for their greatness (Such as Christina Yamaguchi's grandfather,Eva Longoria's rich family history in Texas, or Yo-Yo Ma's large family).
      I think a "Nation of Immigrants" is something America really takes in pride. I feel like without all the outside help and information, we would never be the thriving community we are today. Immigrants truly have shaped America, and allowed it to grow industrially, economically, and intellectually. America is now more open-minded than it once was to such foreign things and people. There is still definitely some issues that need to be cleared, but for the most part we are growing as a group to accepting the different. Immigrants have helped America, but America has also obviously helped the immigrants. My family is from Iran, and I am a first generation American. I am constantly being told how difficult it was living there as a child, and that I should be grateful for everything that I have, which is so extremely true. I often think about how different and terrifying my life would be if I was a woman in Iran. I am so blessed to be in America, and am so thankful that my parents decided to change their lives and the lives of their children for the better.

Thursday, October 18, 2012

Lester Frank Ward

      
        Lester Frank Ward was man much ahead of his time. He was born on June 18, 1841 in Joliet, Illinois. He known by most people to be the Father of American Sociology. His family was not that wealthy, which gives him quite an edge now. He fought in the American Civil War as a Union soldier. Later he got college degrees in botany and law. He also worked for the federal government for quite some time. He is known for the Telesis theory, which is the use of the human mind to control any given situation and change evolution in our society. He also wrote many books such as: Dynamic Sociology in 1883,  Psychic Factors in 1893, and Pure Sociology in 1903. Psychic Sociology showed how feelings, motives, and will in social affairs really work.
        Ward believed that the social sciences gave humans the foundation for happiness. He thought science existed purely for the benefit of humans. He liked to think that humankind is not helpless. He was a very optimistic soul that really thought mankind had so much potential. "The people, through their government, could intervene in the economy and adjust it to serve their needs." He also believed that the reason why humans are separated from nature is because we were given a mind. He opposed Social Darwinism completely. Especially the work of Herbert Spencer. He did truly admire Spencer, but thought he lost track of his beliefs when applying the ideas to a political setting. I really enjoy Ward's optimism in all his beliefs and theories. He really did see things with a modern viewpoint, which is refreshing to see from a historical being.



LINKS: