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When I grow up I want a trans am: Children in Belize talk about themselves and the impact of the world capitalist system
Authors:Nancy Lundgren
Abstract:Conclusion One day I heard the little neighbor boy singing at the top of his voice all by himself in the street outside my window. He was singing a song which seemed to have captured the hearts and imaginations of Belizeans in the summer of 1985. ldquoWe are the world, we are the children, we are the ones who make a brighter day...,rdquo he bellowed. It is a song which I feel symbolizes the desire of these children to be united as ldquochildren of the world.rdquo It expresses the hope and the potential of this little boy (and others like him) in his ability to take for himself the values and global aspirations fashioned from other cultural realities and to make them his own.Part of what it means to be citizens of the world, however, is that the world will judge you. Unitl now, these children have been judged, along with Belize, as ldquounderdeveloped,rdquo ldquopoor,rdquo ldquosmall in worth,rdquo ldquolacking,rdquo and they have believed the judgment. It will take effort to convince the children that this judgment is based on a myth, a myth which ascribes social characteristics to biological categories and then judges people and limits their material options accordingly. It is a colonial myth which shackles the mind and will not allow for real independence and development. If the children continue to believe this myth, if it continues to be perpetuated, the world will continue to be divided in ways which are not only humanly harmful, unjust and dangerous but which poserdquo... a major threat to societal and even human survivalrdquoNancy Lundgren is Assistant Professor of Anthropology at Antioch College, Yellow Springs, Ohio.
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