Short
Answer Questions
(class 25)
Notes:
1) This assignment, like ALL assignments in this class, must be
typed. See handout on class expectations
2)
You MUST use blackboard's digital dropbox (details here)
to submit this homework; if you do not use microsoft word,
be sure to follow these directions
3 ) BE
SURE TO FOLLOW THE FILE-NAMING CONVENTIONS FOR THIS COURSE.
All files should be saved on your computer
as: your last name, followed by an underscore ("_"),
followed by the first two letters of your first name, followed
by an underscore ("_"), followed by the
assignment number. So if a student named Saddam Hussein were to
submit assignment number 25, the file name would be:
hussein_sa_25.doc
THIS
IS ASSIGNMENT 25
This homework
is due at the start of class and can
NOT be turned in late
This homework can NOT
be revised
This homework is worth
1% of you final semester
grade, or 100 Fritz Points
I will grade
only two of the following questions; I will
certainly grade question 5 (worth 65 percent of your grade),
and another question chosen at random (worth 35 percent of your
grade). Any question you do not answer, however, will immediately
become one of the questions I grade.
1) How attractive, according to the author, are “freedom”
and a “consumerist paradise” beyond the borders of
the west? Use
your own words and only your own words
2) Why, according to the author, do the attractions of Western
culture compound for some people their resentments against it?
Use
your own words and only your own words
3) How and why, according
to the author, is western consumer culture a threat to the values
of “social stability, solidarity, and permanence.”
Use your own words and only your own words
4) According to the author, how and why is the west viewed by
non-westerners in much the same fashion as people in the west
once viewed unwed mothers? To what does the author attribute the
change in our sexual morals? Use
your own words and only your own words
5) (A) How did many Turks understand the story of the Turkish
waiter and the British girl? (B) What, according to the author,
was the real reason for the British objection to their intended
marriage? (C) How does the author use this story to develop his
argument IN THE CHAPTER AS A WHOLE (not just
this particular small section)?
Obviously, you will have to understand the
author's over-arching argument across the entire chapter to answer
this question (worth 65% of your grade for this homework). Use
your own words and only your own words
6) How did Industrialization change both (A) the relationship
between the individual and the family and (B) the role of the
family in society? Use your
own words and only your own words
7) What, according to the author, are the negative consequence
of the West’s objections to cruelty? Use
your own words and only your own words