Discuss Food and Food ways as Cultural Identities.

[Pick one of your short assignments (in consultation with me, if you like) and expand it into a longer piece: this will involve additional research (a bibliography, library research, and more detailed ethnographic work), require an attempt at analysis, and should be between 1200-1500 words. Proper essay style is expected (I can provide information on this for those who are […]

Write a description of two current challenges that may arise from cultural differences in today’s world.

Question 1: Challenge of Diversity One focus of cultural psychology is the comparison of individualistic and collectivistic cultures and an examination of how psychological processes are used to socialize members of a culture. Various psychological processes, including aggression, moral reasoning and identity development, lead to culture-specific and universal attitudes, beliefs, and norms. The implications of these differences in terms of […]

Find one personal experience relevant to the topic “To cross-cultural and or intercultural communication”.

To cross-cultural and or intercultural communication: 1. For the main point, find one personal experience relevant to the topic. You should find personal experience evidence that support and or contradict your main point. For personal experience evidence, interview people, observe interactions of others or provide your own experience. 2. Summarize each empirical research paper (you have found for the 1st […]

Support the ethical, political, or cultural superiority or acceptance of the protagonist of your choice in Taking Sides and Collaboration by Ronald Hardwood.

Taking Sides and Collaboration by Ronald Hardwood: Both Taking Sides and Collaboration by Ronald Harwood have been written with such intentional ambiguity that taking the ethical, political, or cultural “side” of an individual protagonist in each work is essential to the process of making the texts comprehensible. Using evidence from the selected text, support the ethical, political, or cultural superiority […]