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MBA, Ph.D in Management
Harvard university
Feb-1997 - Aug-2003
Professor
Strayer University
Jan-2007 - Present
6:06 AM @ ‘1 27% I'LI' Discussions bow to the husband or father. Instead, the elder, >
confused and insecure, might have to borrow a steel ax from them. For the woman and boy, the steel ax helped establish a new degree of freedom that was readily accepted as they moved away from traditional values. Also, women, by virtue of
ownership of this artifact of outside culture, had a trading power denied to older men. By the mid-19305, the Yir Yoront had maintained
some of their Aboriginal identity amidst the
increasing acceptance of European inventions and
values, but the general passing of their culture led
Lauristan Sharp to conclude that the Yir Yoront
“has passed beyond the reach of any outsider who
might wish to do him well or ill ...” See L. Sharp,
“Steel Axes for Stone-Age Australians,” in
Technological Change. New York: Russell Sage,
1952, pp. 69—90. Discuss the changes in the Yir Yoront due to the
steel axe. Are there any other cultures that you
know of that have hardened themselves against outside influence? Respond with a minimum of 200 words and
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