Would you call Charlemagne, Queen Elizabeth I, Galileo, Linnaeus, and Nero primitive Europeans? Samuel Adams and Cherokees as primitive Americans? ;) They would all come from the same time period of which you speak.TillyGalore wrote:Lavabe, I don't think cheerleader daughter was calling present day Ugandans primitive, I think she was referring to Ugandans from days long before any of us were even a twinkle in anyone's eyes, like a couple of centuries, or a millennium or two ago.Lavabe wrote:Wait a minute... there are many more than EIGHT Baha'i Temples in the world.CameronBornAndBred wrote:Since it is the only museum in Uganda, it covers everything from evolution to the Olympics to drugs taken by primitive Ugandans to ways of reducing Uganda’s carbon footprint.
In re: "drugs taken by primitive Ugandans ": although there is a science of paleoethnobotany that looks at human use of plants in a longer time scale, the use of medicinal plants in lieu of western medicine is practiced around the world, and has also given rise to many of the very drugs that we commonly use in Western medicine (e.g., curare, Madagascar periwinkle -- used for certain types of leukemia, etc...). These people are HARDLY primitive. As an anthropologist, unless you are talking about fossil hominin use of plants, I'd beg you to rephrase, as these rural people are NOT primitive.
I don't dispute the poor conditions of the medical clinic. I once overheated and was forced to attend one of these on my way to northern Madagascar in 1989. I DID get injected twice. Basically, the hospital was a cement slab with a little cover, and the doctor did use as sterilized a needle as he could find. No privacy. Yeah... the conditions you are describing are quite common.
I think now that you've experienced a little of life in a developing country, an intro course in cultural or medical anthropology would be REALLY useful. I think it would also be ideal for Rolvix, given his interests in global health.
I'm sure we'll have a fun time come Christmas at the devildeacs!!
Important question: in the nighttime sky on the Equator, what does the Big Dipper look like? Can you also see the Southern Cross there? Over here, the Southern Cross is easy to spot, and the Big Dipper is upside down. What do you see on the Equator?
STAY WELL!!
Now Kyle Busch... OKAY, HE's a primitive American! ;) [BLATANT NASCAR JOKE, given Tilly's dislike of all things BLECH]
For many years even into the 20th century, many biological and cultural scientists who studied colonial subjects in rural conditions considered them to be primitive. Some of the effects of this terminology were to subhumanize people, and to justify colonial policies. A discussion of this appears in Stephen Jay Gould's Mismeasure of Man. There's also been much discussion of this in the cultural anthropology and museum literature as well. I would ALWAYS urge caution on the use of the word "primitive," as it has very serious connotations. Maybe EARLY would be better, if that is what CD meant. Or maybe she meant TRADITIONAL. Or maybe indeed, the museum used the word PRIMITIVE. I don't know.
As an instructor of undergraduates (and well, as CD's uncle), my comments to CD were directed solely to have her focus more precisely what she really meant... which is really one of the tougher things to do when you're bombarded with such a vastly different stream of information and senses from what you're used to. I felt that the Baha'i Temple comment was bizarre as written, and the "primitive" comment wasn't clear. Sometimes the words need to be refined to truly reflect what you're feeling and observing.
Playing the dual role of anthropologist and uncle is sometimes difficult.