Discuss the opinions held by your parents and/or grandparents on race, ethnicity and culture.
This is a 3-page paper that I will not compromise when it comes to quality. For those who rush to bid orders on escrow so that you can make endless calls after 24 hours to have your funds released after you plagiarized the work and produced a substandard paper, this is not your order. I will have to verify that everything is okay before I pay you. I have noticed that some people have outstanding ratings but can’t produce a good paper. I wonder how they got those good ratings from. Please note that I need my work done by somebody who knows what is a thesis statement and a topic sentence. Again I insist, Quality is a MUST. The instructions are posted below. Also, make sure you use some of the sources I have included below. I have attached a word document with information that might guide you in writing the essay. You can’t copy-paste that information. The information is meant to guide you.
Write a short essay (no less than three pages) and discuss the opinions held by your parents and/or grandparents on race, ethnicity and culture.
What terms do they use to describe people of other races, ethnicities, cultures?
How do they talk about or possibly even exhibit racism? The opposite may also turn out to be true with regards to your parents and/or grandparents; they may have always been very accepting of others and accepting of difference. If that is the case, how did their neighbors view their open and inclusive attitudes in the past?
Place this conversation in historical and cultural context by discussing how a previous generation may have formed these views. This requires a little research on your part.
Some of the sources to use.
During the week, please read all of Part V of your textbook, in Applied Ethics: A Multicultural Approach:
Naomi Zack’s “Philosophical and Social Implications of Race”
Kai C. Wong’s “Collective Responsibility and Multiple Racial, Ethnic, and Cultural Identities”
Kwame Anthony Appiah’s “Racisms”
Shelby Steele’s “Affirmative Action: The Price of Preference”
Amy Gutmann’s “Should Public Policy Be Class Conscious Rather Than Color Conscious?”
Bernard Boxill’s “The Color-Blind Principle”