Link salad

Sep. 20th, 2013 06:55 am
osprey_archer: (cheers)
[personal profile] osprey_archer
A cornucopia of links.

First, We Aren’t the World, which is about the fact that recent anthropological research shows that people in different cultures often respond to psychological tests like ultimatum games very differently than the Americans from whom many psychology researchers have drawn their samples and their conclusions about human nature.

Researchers had been doing the equivalent of studying penguins while believing that they were learning insights applicable to all birds.

Or, as my government professor used to say, “Studying the US system to learn about government is like studying platypi to learn about mammals.”

Super interesting!

On a less high-minded note, [livejournal.com profile] sineala sent me this article: Oscar Wilde and Walt Whitman Probably Had Sex Once, which, well, what it says on the tin. I share this because the article is hilarious - ”This is a gift. You do realize that, don’t you? History has reached out to you specifically and given you a gift.” - and also because I feel that someone (someone else, someone who cares about Wilde or Whitman) should totally make this story happen.

In fact, someone already nominated Wilde and Whitman for Yuletide! So there is a golden opportunity right there.

And finally, a how-to for Kirsten braids. Yes! At last I can emulate Kirsten Larsen, the American girl with the most iconic hairstyle.

I am thinking of saving this for a St. Lucia Day party in December. I can make saffron buns! I can figure out a way to put a wreath of candles on my head! Or at least a wreath of holly! I have yearned for this day since I was seven.

Date: 2013-09-22 10:22 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] anait.livejournal.com
Also, if culture is wired on a biological level into the human brain, then it's fluid.

I remembering reading a meme about 'third culture kids,' linked by a friend who spent years living in first one country, and then years in a second country (and then worked and lived in a third!). It was about the unique mish-mash of adaptive behaviours that third-culture kids share in common with each other, because it's such a strange thing to live deeply in one culture and then another! http://www.buzzfeed.com/regajha/31-signs-youre-a-third-culture-kid

Date: 2013-09-23 02:40 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] osprey-archer.livejournal.com
The brain is fluid, you mean? Because if culture is wired into the brain biologically - not in a "racial memory" sort of way, but a "we learn culture as children and it shapes the way our brains develop" - then there's a certain lack of fluidity there.

And the third culture thing is interesting. I hung out with a lot of international students in college, and the list reminded me of them...

Date: 2013-09-23 05:12 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] anait.livejournal.com
Yes, exactly. Culture must be one of those areas to which discussion of neuroplasticity is relevant. It's been studied in the last few decades how the brain is fluid, and this article got me thinking about the ways that culture is and isn't fluid, hence the third culture kids.

I remember the year I lived in London. I learned to say 'Alright?' instead of 'Hi.' I learned to look the wrong way when crossing the street. And to alter my vowels so that people could understand me clearly when I spoke. Things like that and many more became second nature. Then I went back home, and in 2 to 3 months those things fell away.

I didn't stay for years, so had only of a little of the cognitive dissonance that third culture kids must feel when switching from one home country to another.

This article got me thinking about just how important culture is. How when you move to a different place, to live, not just to travel through - even to college - so much of your energy and attention gets devoted to learning and acquiring the new culture, whether you realize it or not.

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