In contrast to Britain, the figuration of multiculturalism in the United States has produced much greater social reverberations and contested theoretical resolutions. This is hardly surprising, considering that the main institutional sites for the multicultural debates in Britain were primary and secondary school education, while in the United States it was the university. What became known as the "culture wars" in the United States during the mid-1980's into the 1990's, politicized and expanded the concept of multiculturalism beyond the parameters of race and ethnicity, into the discourses of gender and sexuality conceived as socially repressed cultural differences. The culture wars engaged and enraged university teaching, book publishing and public journalism. Stimulating a searing calling into question as well as the implacable defense of the cultural American mainstream, the culture wars produced an impassionate politics of knowledge in which interrogations of the exclusionary racial, gender, sexual and class formations of the nation were reactivated as themes relevant not only to the democratic ideals of citizenship but to the epistemology of many academic disciplines. Once it was widely perceived that the western canon was under assault, this sparkled a counter-reformation. The discourse of multiculturalism in the United States touched political nerves which were irreducible to the nervous system of either Left or Right. It has been variously lampooned as "political correctness"; the critique of the hegemony of "dead white males" in knowledge production; or the attempt to overturn western civilization by substituting for the "classics" lesser readings based not on scholarly values but on ethnic and gender proportionality. More considered critics have seen it a feverish post-modern embrace of relativism in knowledge (whether scientific or moral) and an irrational, ethnicized opposition to universalism which eschews a broad-based politics (i.e. organized against the social inequalities of material interests), favoring instead an identity politics organized around the virtues of cultural recognition. The trouble with criticisms of this nature is that whatever merits they contain are ill-served by their inability to distinguish exactly the object of their critique. That there are various multiculturalisms in the politics of multiculturalism is perhaps the chief contribution of the United States' experience to the debate, but this is not yet something that the critique of multiculturalism has managed to take on board. As Cynthia Willet puts it in her anthology of philosophical arguments, "Multiculturalism has not yet been fully theorized. In part the lack of a unifying theory stems from the fact that multiculturalism as a political, social and cultural movement has aimed to respect a multiplicity of diverging perspectives outside of dominant traditions". Admittedly, this may be the over-idealization of a provisional and pragmatic set of circumstances but it does point to the need to understand the politics of multiculturalism(s) as articulating, in critique of dominant, oppressive traditions, different specifications of the logic of the multicultural in the fields of knowledge and representation. Understanding these dominant traditions within the logic of the multicultural suggests the need for coalitions and co-production in knowledge formation which takes seriously the "local memories" and "subjugated knowledge" (according to Foucault) whose exclusion and repression shore up the dominant tradition as an unquestionably valorized (western) universal foundation. In the United States (as in Britain), it is the colonial institutions of the western foundation of power and knowledge which, despite concomitant developments in liberalism and subsequent formulations of representative democracy, have yet to experience significant decolonization. At its best, the politics of multiculturalism in the United States has raised serious doubts and consternation
(HESSE, B. Un/settled Multiculturalisms, 2000)
According to the text
a)
in the UK, multiculturalism was restrict to educational debates, while in the USA the so-called "culture wars" took place in academia. |
b)
critics of multiculturalism contend that replacing canonized literature by what they consider lesser works is an attack on western civilization. |
c)
issues such as gender and sexuality were academically considered only when multiculturalism started being debated in the 80's by American scholars. |
d)
multiculturalism and its discourse of "political correctness" have been satirized in the USA by Democrats and Republicans. |
e)
to overthrow western tradition, multiculturalism must find a unifying theory and form coalitions to produce knowledge. |
Based on Hesse's text, analyse the assertions below.
I. Multiculturalism is as diverse as the spectrum of questions that it encompasses; therefore it must be called multiculturalisms.
II. Some participants of the "culture wars" unyieldingly defended American prevalent culture.
III. Critics of multiculturalism have seen it as a post- modern tendency that promotes division instead of union.
The correct assertion(s) is/are
a)
I, only. |
b)
I and II, only. |
c)
II, only. |
d)
II and III, only. |
e)
III, only. |
Read the sentence below.
"Stimulating a searing calling into question(.), the culture wars produced an impassionate politics of knowledge."
Choose the alternative that replaces the highlighted idiom in the sentence.
a)
".dispute on issues(.)" |
b)
".search for answers(.)" |
c)
".exchange of opinions(.)" |
d)
".raise of doubts(.)" |
e)
".summon into action(.)" |
Choose the alternative that best translates the following sentence into Portuguese:
"Admittedly, this may be the over-idealization of a provisional and pragmatic set of circumstances."
a)
Verdade, isto pode ser supervalorização de um grupo provisório, burocrático, de circunstâncias. |
b)
Isto pode, admitidamente, representar máxima exaltação de um conjunto de circunstâncias providenciais e praticas. |
c)
Isto pode, confessadamente, ser a idealização em excesso de um par providencial e burocrático de circunstâncias. |
d)
Isto pode ser a idealização excessiva de um temporário e realista conjunto de circunstâncias, alegadamente. |
e)
Isto, reconhecidamente, pode ser romantização excessiva de um conjunto temporário e prático de circunstâncias. |
Read the paragraph below to choose the alternative that best summarizes it.
"Understanding these dominant traditions within the logic of the multicultural suggests the need for coalitions and co-production in knowledge formation which takes seriously the "local memories" and "subjugated knowledge" (according to Foucault) whose exclusion and repression shore up the dominant tradition as an unquestionably valorized (western) universal foundation."
a)
The dominant, universal tradition must be understood by the multicultural approach which is, as pointed out Foucault, "local memories" and "subjugated knowledge"; only then minorities will be also valorized. |
b)
The logic of multiculturalism implies that, in order to overcome the actual system that represses and oppresses minorities, it's necessary to form alliances between, as wrote Foucault, "local memories" and "subjugated knowledge". |
c)
The multicultural approach sees how important it is to produce knowledge based on the experience of minorities, since it is its exclusion and repression that sustain the dominant, said to be universal, tradition as such. |
d)
Coalitions are necessary when dealing with multicultural knowledge: Only through union it will be possible to establish a battlefront against the mainstream western culture that preaches exclusion and subjugation. |
e)
The western tradition, despite its universal character, is over-valorized; therefore, it's indispensable that multicultural enthusiasts gather together to rescue the memories and the knowledge that are being oppressed and obliterated. |
Read the last paragraph of Hesse's text.
"At its best, the politics of multiculturalism in the United States has raised serious doubts and consternation ."
Choose the alternative that completes this last paragraph correctly.
a)
".and, at the same time, has offered answers to many questions - though, in these post-modern days, there are no definitive theories, no absolute interpretation" |
b)
".about what mainstream culture is and what it is not, about what must be preserved and what should be transformed in face of globalization" |
c)
".and it's still causing an uproar in the academic circles that reproduce, though on minor scale, the now-finished American culture wars" |
d)
".regarding its incapacity to fight racism and sexism, especially in American academia, and inability to promote true equity" |
e)
".about the capacity of western nations attempting to represent cultural diversity and incorporate differences, as if this did not imply the need for a broad transformation" |
Choose the alternative that best transforms into reported speech what is said in the cartoon below.
a)
The student apologized and swore that a new computer virus called "Cyber-Dog X-9" had eaten his homework. |
b)
A student said "I'm sorry" to the teacher and told him that a computer virus ate his homework. |
c)
The student entered the classroom and said to the teacher that he was sorry about his homework, which was eaten by a computer virus. |
d)
A student has entered the classroom, apologized to his teacher and said to him that the virus Cyber-Dog X-9 had eaten his homework. He swore by it. |
e)
The student was crying and apologized to the teacher, saying that a new computer virus had eaten his homework. He swore that that was true. |
Read the sentence below and choose the alternative that fills in correctly and respectively the blanks.
Under less-than-optimal conditions, evaluating instructional materials can certainly amount to a wholly subjective, arbitrary exercise; , the use of simple systematic tools can streamline the assessment of competences.
a)
but/ also/ however |
b)
and/ therefore/ even |
c)
also/ although/ and |
d)
even/ however/ yet |
e)
yet/ despite/ even |
Read the sentence below.
Japanese word order is relatively free; therefore, two noun phrases may be scrambled without affecting the meaning of the sentence.
Choose the alternative that presents the word that replaces correctly the highlighted conjunction.
a)
Thus. |
b)
Nevertheless. |
c)
Yet. |
d)
However. |
e)
Whereas. |
Read the paragraph below and choose the alternative that fills in correctly and respectively the blanks.
For immigrant students achieving bilinguism can be difficult. Those with strong ties to a cohesive ethnic and linguistic community in which English is or used may find that school is the only place where English is the primary medium of communication.
a)
hardly/ rarely/ never. |
b)
truly/ ever/ never. |
c)
always/ plainly/ vulgarly |
d)
considerably/ seldom/ never |
e)
very/ randomly/ faultlessly. |
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