AES 151 Lecture Notes - Lecture 1: Code-Switching, Sigmund Freud, Chicano Movement
Document Summary
Question of the day: can you think of anything that exists in this world that does not have a. Foundational items for the study of cultures: (what is an argument?) An argument is a statement or expression of an opinion that requires testing th (social science definition) (empirical definition) "we are not only individuals; we are social groups" Main argument today: thinking about culture; requires thinking about ideas/practice. But thinking about identities requires thinking first about the ideology of the "social c. Relationships between culture and identities: one arguments and four questions. Ideology: refers to the body of ideas on which a particular political, economic, or soc set of beliefs about anything, mostly about how the world works. It has the power to appear "natural" even though it is humanly invented; it"s the pow and without history. (that"s the way it is) A set of statements used to explain or speculate on something; that human be and action.