Gender Class And Terrorism Analysis

Words: 437
Pages: 2

The World’s Prism Culture limits our vision of the world, culture clashes generally provoke conflicts but thanks to the worldwide communication systems the problems between cultures are vanishing. Mr. Michael S. Kimmel in his article “Gender, Class, and Terrorism” explains what influence terrorists while Mr. Kwame Anthony Appiah shares his vision about how the English and the African society differ and overlap in his article “Moral Disagreement”. Every individual is trapped in their own culture. Culture contains an individuals’ language, values, fears among many other things, it essentially teaches people how to behave within a frame were everything outside its limits is wrong or forbidden. Mr. Appiah illustrates “… Many Americans eat pigs, but won’t eat cats” (662). Because our culture taught us since we were little that cats should be hugged and loved but pigs and cattle are food and taste good. We are raised eating cows …show more content…
Things that unites a few such as religion or philosophy can be used to provoke the bloodletting and hate between people from different societies, maybe because of the ambition of leaders or simply for our natural violent behavior. We as humans constantly fight for everything, we want to be better than the other people, since it has been what made us evolve and surpass other species, it seem that now it is holding us back. The internet has become a worldwide communication system that allows us to communicate and share ideas without much effort, to see how many beautiful things are outside of our little cultural box. What was used to provoke wars and disgust between others is now become curiosity, it intrigues us to know why people behave a certain way. Music for instance, has genres that connect music from different cultures, some artists may include bossa nova from Brazil, rock from England, and jazz from the United States in a single song, something impossible a couple centuries