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10 votes
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The tyranny of convenience
12 votes -
'It's amazing tatau's persisted': How Samoan tattooing withstood colonialism
6 votes -
Human contact is now a luxury good | Screens used to be for the elite. Now avoiding them is a status symbol.
13 votes -
Blind people can struggle to understand memes, so they made their own
11 votes -
'I hate what they’ve done to almost everyone in my family' (An article about Fox News poisoning.)
36 votes -
You can never go home to GeoCities again - The new video games Hypnospace and Wrong Box offer up complicated nostalgia for the internet of yesterday
4 votes -
What does the word 'civilized' mean to you? Can it be used to compare and contrast societies and cultures?
Do you believe that some cultures/societies are more 'civilized' than others? What is your definition of 'civilized' / what does it mean to be 'civilized'? ~ If you've studied history and/or...
Do you believe that some cultures/societies are more 'civilized' than others? What is your definition of 'civilized' / what does it mean to be 'civilized'?
~
If you've studied history and/or anthropology then surely you've heard many uses of the term "savages" to describe groups of people that were considered to be less 'civilized' than whomever was writing that piece.
I was also just reading a book that described in detail some of the really horrible war crimes committed by both sides in the Sri Lankan civil war including but not limited to: raging mobs burning people alive, murder and rape of civilians, use of child soldiers, suicide bombers, etc. Please note that in no way am I considering the people of Sri Lanka as 'uncivilized', just using an example of what seems to be 'uncivilized' behavior.An initial thought that I had was "huh, I'm glad I don't currently live somewhere where I could be burned alive based on my ethnicity/religion/beliefs by a rage fueled mob of people", but then the history of the western world came to mind - some of those exact same thing happened less than 100 years ago to many non-white groups of people in America, including some things even worse (read: human slavery). From here came a flood of other thoughts poking holes in whatever my initial definition of 'civilized' was. Plenty of things in present-day United States could be considered uncivilized. Yet one could make an argument that a more 'civilized' civilization might be one that allows many personal freedoms.
So, I want to ask all of you what you think of the concept of being 'civilized'. Is it a colonialistic-type term used to promote a higher sense of placement in the world that should be abolished. Does it have any merit in its use? If so, what do you think makes a civilized group of people and does one exist?
16 votes -
Why drinking can feel isolating when you have 'Asian glow'
16 votes -
The alt-right playbook: Always a bigger fish
14 votes -
Stepping into the uncanny, unsettling world of Shen Yun
25 votes -
James Kelman on the Booker, class and literary elitism
4 votes -
Reddit has become a battleground of alleged Chinese trolls
18 votes -
I have forgotten how to read: For a long time Michael Harris convinced himself that a childhood spent immersed in old-fashioned books would insulate him from our new media climate. He was wrong.
19 votes -
Kipple field notes
3 votes -
THQ Nordic hosts an AMA on 8chan, releases apology two hours later
10 votes -
Workism is making Americans miserable
42 votes -
Memes are our generation's protest art
13 votes -
Who killed Tulum, Mexico? Greed, gringos, diesel, drugs, shamans, seaweed, and a disco ball in the jungle.
7 votes -
War over being nice
21 votes -
Why White people don't use White emoji: Does shame explain the disparity in the lesser use of light-skin-tone symbols in the US?
18 votes -
The overlooked history of African American skate culture
6 votes -
Why are young people pretending to love work?
31 votes -
In France, comic books are serious business
18 votes -
There’s a vanishing resource we’re not talking about - humans are losing our cultural diversity even faster than we’re destroying the planet
27 votes -
The alt-right playbook: The card says moops
18 votes -
Who owns the internet? (What Big Tech’s monopoly powers mean for our culture.)
11 votes -
How the Latin East contributed to a unique cultural world
4 votes -
A massive amount of iconic works will enter the public domain on New Year’s Eve
37 votes -
Machine learning can offer new tools, fresh insights for the humanities
10 votes -
Forgive fast, block even faster and other rules for maintaining your sanity on the internet
6 votes -
A generation in Japan faces a lonely death
19 votes -
Has Australia finally been won over by Halloween?
9 votes -
The young queer writer who became Greenland’s unlikely literary star
6 votes -
Alienation is the most powerful online brand
10 votes -
King Addies celebrates thirty-five years with '35 Gun Salute' mixtape feat. Fugees, Anita Baker, Nas and more
5 votes -
Living with Slenderman
7 votes -
Why don’t westerners eat off one plate?
14 votes -
The say of the land. Is language produced by the mind? Romantic theory has it otherwise: words emerge from the cosmos, expressing its soul
4 votes -
Cybernetics pioneer Norbert Wiener on the malady of “content” and how to save creative culture from the syphoning of substance
6 votes -
Goths for Trump - Inside the unholy alliance of goth culture and radical right politics
8 votes -
Occitan, the language the French forbade
10 votes -
Signs of life: Does a music festival in a desert offer hope for cultural reform in Uzbekistan?
3 votes -
What are "the sounds of your people"?
Hey all, I'm interested in knowing what music would you say is unmistakably yours, in the sense that when you hear it you remember nights with the family/friends, parties, or maybe they remind you...
Hey all,
I'm interested in knowing what music would you say is unmistakably yours, in the sense that when you hear it you remember nights with the family/friends, parties, or maybe they remind you of your grandparents' musky apartment, or nights at the beach, whatever.
For me there is a story behind almost every style of music I listen to, so my spotify lists are "nostalgia_parents", "nostalgia_grandpa", "nostalgia_home" etc. lol, and I think it's similar for everybody, so I was curious... what are your stories?
(mine in comments)
8 votes -
How Cyberpunk 2077 uses asian culture as window dressing
12 votes -
We can't fix the internet (because we conflate social media with the entire internet)
13 votes -
What fun examples of cultural differences have you experienced?
When I was in high school I went to China through an education program. On the plane there I was seated next to an elderly Chinese woman on my left and a mother and daughter to my right. While...
When I was in high school I went to China through an education program. On the plane there I was seated next to an elderly Chinese woman on my left and a mother and daughter to my right.
While talking with the daughter and mother at some point the elderly woman became involved. She spoke cantonese and my mandarin was limited so the mother helped to translate.
The elderly woman took out paper and pen from her bag and began to have me write me characters. Some time after, she put her hands on my face and began to massage it in circular motions. It was strange but pleasant because clearly her intentions were good. I looked over to the man who was leading my fellow students, and got a thumbs up as he mouthed "just go with it".
I'd never experienced such caring from a complete stranger. It was a lovely introduction into their culture and genuine happiness to share it.
23 votes -
What computer/programming/etc. project are you working on this weekend?
This is a thread to discuss the projects you have planned for the weekend. Previous threads: 2018-07-27 2018-06-16
38 votes -
Thoughts on religion
Let's debate religion. I don't think I've seen this topic on Tildes yet and it might be interesting. My country has practically no visible religion - about 10-15% of our population is religious...
Let's debate religion. I don't think I've seen this topic on Tildes yet and it might be interesting.
My country has practically no visible religion - about 10-15% of our population is religious (mostly seniors) - and just a fraction of them does those religious thing like going to church. Religion basically doesn't exist here. We have a lot of nice churches, but they mostly aren't used.
The thing that I think caused this big amount of atheists (agnostics, ...) is that almost noone is raised to believe in God - in our culture, we don't teach religion at all. Kids are taught that religions exist, but they are not pressed to believe in it such as in other parts of world. They choose what to believe. And God isn't the thing people choose for most of the time.
Whenever I see anything about USA (discussion, film, serial), I frequently see religion there. When I saw it for the first time when I was young, I thought something like "They still have religion there? I thought USA is developed country". I don't think it anymore, I understand better why are people religious, but still - I'd like to know more about more religious cultures and what effect religion have in other countries.
22 votes -
How to destroy people: Japan's untouchables
11 votes