Saturday, February 27, 2010

Universal Desires

[Photo Credit--amazon.com]

In anthropology, we have started reading a book entitled Feeding Desire: Fatness, Beauty, and Sexuality Among a Saharan People. This book has been both inspiring and eye-opening. The women in the Eastern most group of Moors, also known as the Azawagh Arabs, spend their life devoted to getting, well, fat (in this case not at all a derogatory term, but used for lack of a better word). In this part of the world, by the time girls lose their first baby teeth, the fattening process begins. This process becomes the women's "education." When young girls resist eating after stuffing their face full of milk and porridge, the grandmothers or aunts will throw things at the girls or bend their fingers backwards to make them continue eating. To be fat is to be beautiful and sexually desirable. Being fat means being attractive to men, which means they will be married off. This way of living seemed strange to me at first...here in the West people pay a pretty penny for pills, diet plans, nutritionists, organic foods, and workout machines to be slender. For the Moors, to eat and be larger separates them from the lower castes. Just like we may not understand their wanting to be fat, the Moors do not comprehend the West's desire to be thin. This book, and class, have opened my eyes to the different cultures around the world. While it may seem that we are all so different, we are in many ways the same--even in this case for example: appearance and beauty are universal desires.

Saturday, February 13, 2010

Happy Chinese New Year!

Happy Chinese New Year! Tonight was the Lunar New Year celebration at school. The above picture is a dragon mask that was one of the decorations on stage. Wear red, exchange best wishes, and have a wonderful new year! Also, Happy Valentines Day! May your day be full of chocolate, candies, and love--whether that be with your boyfriend, girlfriend, husband, wife, family, friends, or just yourself! Take time to smell the roses, although...I'd much rather get caramels and chocolate than a bouquet.

Sunday, February 7, 2010

Friday, February 5, 2010

Artistic Differences


I have to draw what in art class?

Traditionally Modern

[Photo Credit--loveroni]
In one picture, this alley in Sydney city captures the style aesthetic that I love: traditional and modern. I like anything made out of brick: old brick houses, streets, buildings; but I also like anything modern: colors that pop, bubble chairs, funky shapes and objects, art. Here, you get the best of both worlds. If this were my neighborhood, I would constantly be in awe.



Year of the Tiger

[Photo Credit--newspapergrl.com]

On February 14th, Lunar New Year officially begins! 2010 is the year of the Tiger, the third animal in the 12-animal Chinese Zodiac. The Tiger represents courage, passion, and power--and for those I know who were born in the year of the Tiger, these descriptions hold true! For the past couple of New Years, my family and friends would gather together at someone's house and celebrate the coming year. One of our recent traditions is to make dumplings from scratch. The kids would cut the dough into small circles and press them flat. The adults made the filling, and another group would scoop filling into the dough circle and form it into the perfect bite-size dumpling.

It is always nice to come together to celebrate happiness, culture, stories, laughs, food, and the occasional swap of money! (Red envelopes are handed out with money--always an even amount) Popular themes are wealth, longevity, and happiness. Red is the popular color for the day--people will hang red-decorations around the house and in their windows, and wear the color red to signify joy, virtue, truth, and sincerity.

While I will not be at home this year for Chinese New Year, I will still be celebrating it a day early through my school's Lunar New Year Festival, which will feature many talented students and teachers as they play their instruments, sing their songs, perform martial arts, break dance, and even perform a monologue in Japanese (not Chinese...but nevertheless, it will still be entertaining!) Also, Chinese New Year falls on Valentines Day (or Valentines Day falls on Chinese New Year), which is kind of perfect, because then not only will I be wearing red, but everyone! Lots of love for the Chinese New Year, let's make this a memorable year!


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