Thursday, February 7, 2019
RURAL PARADISE OR A CONCRETE JUNGLE? :: essays papers
RURAL PARADISE OR A CONCRETE JUNGLE?Over the course of the semester we have watched  legion(predicate) movies (Heart priming Reggae, The Harder They Come, Countryman, Dancehall Queen, Third World Cop, Rockers, and Land of Look Behind) that depict Rastafarians  reinforcement in both the country and the city.  Not knowing much about  all Jamaican setting, I decided to take a closer  project at both the urban and  untaught areas in which Rastafarians live and  give their beliefs.  I wanted to see if the different settings had much influence on Rastafarians.  Is this a personal choice they have or are they  forced out of rural paradise and into the concrete jungle of Babylon?  According to the Websters Third New International Dictionary the definition for urban is 1)a of, relating to,  feature of, or taking place in a city, b constituting or including and centered on a city, c of, relating to, or concerned with an urban and specifically a densely populated area.  The definition for rural    is 1) living in country areas engaged in agricultural pursuits, 2) characterized by  ease lacking sophistication uncomplicated, 3) of, relating to, or characteristic of  volume who live in the country, 4) of, relating to, associated with, or typical of the country, 5) of, relating to, or constituting a tenement in land adapted and used for agricultural or pastoral purpose-opposed to urban.  Many rural and urban areas exist in the United States.  Depending on where you live in spades affects who you are, how you think, dress, eat etc.  Is this true for the Rastafarians?GENERAL JAMAICA INFORMATIONLocated in the West Indian Islands, Jamaica represents the third largest island.  Jamaica is 150 miles long and 52 miles wide.  The  subtropical climate does not produce the extremes related to climate found in the United States.  The island of Jamaica is described as being very beautiful with its rivers, harbors, and  many a(prenominal) mountains.  The population of Jamaica has not quite re   ached three million with the majority of people living in the city of Kingston, the capital of Jamaica (Barrett 3).The difference in  operate earnings among Jamaican people is alarming.  Those who have a profession  authorise around thirty times as much as those who do not.  Nearly half of all Jamaicans make less than twenty-five dollars per hebdomad (Barrett 12).     There has been a tradition of migration from Jamaican rural areas since the nineteenth century.  
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