Team Dragon:
Clair Fuller
Yee-Lum Mak
Alex Tranquada
Laurel Kitada
Jodi Shou
Per. 4
Clair Fuller
Yee-Lum Mak
Alex Tranquada
Laurel Kitada
Jodi Shou
Per. 4
Edwardian Era Synthesis
Violence as
retribution is not moral except in the case of violence to prevent clear and
present danger, such as in self-defense. Violence during war is viewed by
society as justified—acts that would be considered atrocious outside of the
context of wartime are considered grounds for a medal. However, the way society
views violence during war fails to consider the morality of war itself. While
violent acts within a war may be amoral, war itself is almost always immoral.
Violence during present times is often framed as the only way to prevent a
threat or to protect a person, institution, or ideal that is valued by our
society. Whether the threat is real or imagined, and whether violence is indeed
the only possible course of action, is highly debatable in most cases of modern
“justified violence.”
Rudyard
Kipling’s poem The White Man’s Burden
is an example of the way violence was justified as retribution during the
Edwardian Era, particularly with regard to the massive British empire of the
day. Although written in 1899, two years before the beginning of the Edwardian
Era, The White Man’s Burden has
become symbolic of the imperialist attitudes of that were present during the
Victorian and Edwardian eras. The colonization and “civilizing” of exotic lands
during the height of the British Empire often came with tremendous cruelty
towards the native citizens of the countries, but The White Man’s Burden presents these horrors as an appropriate
response to the very existence of the “new-caught, sullen peoples.” Violence in
this case is viewed as a justified retaliation against the native citizens of
different races that lived in countries with traditions and cultures different
from those of Western society. The White
Man’s Burden frames violence against these peoples as a necessary response
to their mere uncivilized presence on the face of the earth—the violence is
provoked by their existence, less than any specific actions.
It was absolutely amazing, we learned so this amazing answer to the very difficult and vague question. Your team has open our eyes to the modern “justified violence.” and your choice of art was both appropriate and interesting. all in all great answer!
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