Saturday, February 29, 2020
Alan Klein Sugarball
More importantly, Klein asserts, baseball is uniquely American in how it has spread to other nations and dominates the game elsewhere.à It has the largest and strongest organization, the richest teams, largest fan base, most lucrative broadcasting and advertising contracts, and most extensive networks for scouting and player development. Baseballââ¬â¢s presence in the Dominican Republic (among the western hemisphereââ¬â¢s poorest nations) is also uniquely American because, as with other aspects of American culture, it was brought there as American domination spread throughout the Caribbean American interests assumed control of the Dominican economy. However, unlike other American corporations, Major League Baseball did not provoke widespread, unmitigated resentment, but is for the most part supported by the nationââ¬â¢s people.à In addition, the methods long used to scout and sign Dominican ballplayers is similarly dubious and rifer with duplicity; Klein calls their methods ââ¬Å"so reminiscent of those of the West African slave traders of three centuries earlierâ⬠(42). In terms of the game itself, the rules and style in each are generally the same, and while Dominicans play the game with an intensity equal with Americans, their approach to other aspects of baseball are more casual, reflecting that societyââ¬â¢s leniency and lax approach to time.à While Dominican players play as hard as their American teammates and opponents, they embrace a much more casual attitude toward time, frequently showing up late for meetings or practice unless specifically required to be punctual.à In addition, they tend to be more exuberant and unrestrained; playing the game seriously is not equated with a somber demeanor. Most of the differences lie off the field, particularly in the atmosphere of a stadium on game day.à The fan culture is radically different; where American fans are more restrained, often get to games on time, and can sometimes be confrontational with other fans, Dominican fans are generally louder, more physically and temperamentally relaxed, more effusive (even with strangers), and, despite the demonstrative body language and shouting shown in arguments, there is far less violence than at an American ballgame. Klein attributes this to the fact that ââ¬Å"[Dominican fans] are far more social than North Americans, more in tune with human frailty.à Because they see so much human vulnerability, because they are closer to the margins of life, they are more likely to resist the urge to bully and harmâ⬠(148). Economic power essentially defines the relationship between American and Dominican baseball, because Major League Baseball develops and signs much of the local Dominican talent, leaving the Dominican professional league and amateur ranks underdeveloped and subordinate to the North American teams who establish baseball academies and working agreements with Dominican teams. Since 1955, when the major leagues established working agreements with Dominican professional clubs (and, more significantly, eliminated the ââ¬Å"color lineâ⬠that prevented most Dominicans, who are predominantly mulatto, from playing), American baseball has shown its hegemony over its Dominican counterpart, turning the latter into a virtual colony by taking its raw resources and giving back very little in return.à Klein comments: ââ¬Å"The lure of cheap, abundant talent in the Dominican Republic led American teams to establish a more substantial presence there . . . [and the] bonds between American and Dominican baseball came increasingly to resemble other economic and political relations between the two countriesâ⬠(36). Klein writes that most Dominicans accept American dominance of their baseball, adding that ââ¬Å"whereas giants such as Falconbridge and GTE are resented, major league teams are largely supportedâ⬠(2), mainly because Dominican players have such a notable presence and bring positive attention to their impoverished homeland.à This support is by no means unconditional, though; they steadfastly refuse to approach the game with American businesslike gravitas; instead, they treat the game itself somewhat like Carnival, with joy coexisting alongside energetic, intense play. Resistance appears in the way Dominican players relax at home, interacting more freely with fans, who themselves resist American baseballââ¬â¢s decorum by being themselves and creating a festive, effusive, Carnival-like atmosphere.à According to Klein, ââ¬Å"The game remains American in structure, but its setting is Dominican and it has become infused with Dominican valuesâ⬠(149).à Indeed, the park fosters a microcosm of Dominican society, particularly its impoverished economy, and unlike the more slick American baseball business, it does not exclude its marginal activities. In addition to the paid vendors and park employees within the stadium, an illicit economy flourishes both within and on the outside, with self-appointed ââ¬Å"car watchers,â⬠vendors, and ushers (adults and children alike) plying their trade for small fees, and bookmakers work openly, often in the presence of the police, who turn a blind eye to most illegal activity aside from the rare fight. Dominican baseballââ¬â¢s symbolic significance is not a sense of the pastoral heritage, like some in America interpret it; instead, it reflects Dominicansââ¬â¢ sense of themselves being dominated by the United States, and offers a symbolic outlet for striking back. In his preface, Klein writes: ââ¬Å"The tensions between a batter who has two strikes against him and the opposing pitcher are a metaphor for the political and cultural tensions described in this bookâ⬠(xi).à Indeed, the Dominican republicââ¬â¢s deeply entrenched poverty and long domination by foreign powers give it a feeling of vulnerability and compel its people to seek some means of besting the dominant power ââ¬â if not politically or economically, then at least athletically. At the start of the book, Klein states that ââ¬Å"every turn at bat is a candle of hope, every swing is the wave of a banner, the sweeping arc of a swordâ⬠(1).à Indeed, when a Dominican reaches the major leagues and excels, it is not merely an athletic success story but a symbolic invasion and conquest of the conquerorââ¬â¢s territory.à (The United States twice occupied the Dominican Republic in the twentieth century, an ever-present fact in Dominicansââ¬â¢ minds.) Also, the atmosphere in the crowd of a Dominican professional game serves as the countryââ¬â¢s symbolic assertion of its culture in the face of American dominance.à At Santo Domingoââ¬â¢s Quisqueya Stadium, one witnesses ââ¬Å"a mass spectacle that makes simultaneous use of American and Dominican elements. . . . [Baseball] at Quisqueya embodies many of the things that North Americans find blameworthy in Dominican culture ââ¬â lateness, overly casual behavior, inefficiency.à But the Dominicans see these characteristics as a source of pride, and they take their game seriouslyâ⬠(150). The Dominican baseball press is a source of more open resistance; says Klein, ââ¬Å"the press has inadvertently created a Latino universe of discourse, one in which North Americans are conspicuously absentâ⬠(127).à Its journalists display an obvious bias by devoting so much attention to Dominicans in the major leagues that one hardly knows other nationalities even participate. In addition, Dominican baseball writers openly blame Dominican baseballââ¬â¢s problems on American control, protesting a skewed economic relationship that mirrors the larger political and economic imbalance.à They promote much of the publicââ¬â¢s pride, says Klein, but that pride is ââ¬Å"tempered by the view that Dominican baseball is still an adjunct to the American gameâ⬠(121).à Dominican resistance is thus aimed at countering this uncomfortable fact. In baseball terms, American culture interacts with Dominican culture by treating it with some degree of condescension and insensitivity.à Many American baseball professionals are impatient with Dominicansââ¬â¢ loose sense of time, quickly deeming Latino players uncoachable ââ¬Å"head cases,â⬠without looking at the cultural differences. Among Dominicans, says Klein, ââ¬Å"There is none of the regimentation, guardedness, and nervous tension that characterizes players in the United States.à North American managers must take this looseness into account when they go to the Caribbean, for the playersââ¬â¢ conception of the game and of time is as elastic as that of other Dominicansâ⬠(148). Despite the United Statesââ¬â¢ long domination of the Dominican Republic, the small nationââ¬â¢s people feel less anger than a mixture of muted resentment and aspiration to attain American material prosperity and stability, which for most are a distant, unreachable ideal.à Thus, when Dominican ballplayers reach the major leagues, their large salaries represent a sort of victory and source of immense pride for the small island nation.à Says Klein, ââ¬Å"Much as archeological treasures attest to a rich Dominican past, salaries attest to the presentâ⬠(128). Kleinââ¬â¢s study pays keen attention not only to Dominican history but also to the ways in which Dominicans embrace this imported sport but also use their prowess to offer their own subtle response to American political and economic dominance.à The dynamic he describes illustrates not only American hegemony, but also how subordinated peoplesââ¬â¢ identity and spirit can thrive even in the face of foreign domination. Klein, Alan M.à Sugarball.à New Haven: Yale University Press, 1991. Alan Klein Sugarball More importantly, Klein asserts, baseball is uniquely American in how it has spread to other nations and dominates the game elsewhere.à It has the largest and strongest organization, the richest teams, largest fan base, most lucrative broadcasting and advertising contracts, and most extensive networks for scouting and player development. Baseballââ¬â¢s presence in the Dominican Republic (among the western hemisphereââ¬â¢s poorest nations) is also uniquely American because, as with other aspects of American culture, it was brought there as American domination spread throughout the Caribbean American interests assumed control of the Dominican economy. However, unlike other American corporations, Major League Baseball did not provoke widespread, unmitigated resentment, but is for the most part supported by the nationââ¬â¢s people.à In addition, the methods long used to scout and sign Dominican ballplayers is similarly dubious and rifer with duplicity; Klein calls their methods ââ¬Å"so reminiscent of those of the West African slave traders of three centuries earlierâ⬠(42). In terms of the game itself, the rules and style in each are generally the same, and while Dominicans play the game with an intensity equal with Americans, their approach to other aspects of baseball are more casual, reflecting that societyââ¬â¢s leniency and lax approach to time.à While Dominican players play as hard as their American teammates and opponents, they embrace a much more casual attitude toward time, frequently showing up late for meetings or practice unless specifically required to be punctual.à In addition, they tend to be more exuberant and unrestrained; playing the game seriously is not equated with a somber demeanor. Most of the differences lie off the field, particularly in the atmosphere of a stadium on game day.à The fan culture is radically different; where American fans are more restrained, often get to games on time, and can sometimes be confrontational with other fans, Dominican fans are generally louder, more physically and temperamentally relaxed, more effusive (even with strangers), and, despite the demonstrative body language and shouting shown in arguments, there is far less violence than at an American ballgame. Klein attributes this to the fact that ââ¬Å"[Dominican fans] are far more social than North Americans, more in tune with human frailty.à Because they see so much human vulnerability, because they are closer to the margins of life, they are more likely to resist the urge to bully and harmâ⬠(148). Economic power essentially defines the relationship between American and Dominican baseball, because Major League Baseball develops and signs much of the local Dominican talent, leaving the Dominican professional league and amateur ranks underdeveloped and subordinate to the North American teams who establish baseball academies and working agreements with Dominican teams. Since 1955, when the major leagues established working agreements with Dominican professional clubs (and, more significantly, eliminated the ââ¬Å"color lineâ⬠that prevented most Dominicans, who are predominantly mulatto, from playing), American baseball has shown its hegemony over its Dominican counterpart, turning the latter into a virtual colony by taking its raw resources and giving back very little in return.à Klein comments: ââ¬Å"The lure of cheap, abundant talent in the Dominican Republic led American teams to establish a more substantial presence there . . . [and the] bonds between American and Dominican baseball came increasingly to resemble other economic and political relations between the two countriesâ⬠(36). Klein writes that most Dominicans accept American dominance of their baseball, adding that ââ¬Å"whereas giants such as Falconbridge and GTE are resented, major league teams are largely supportedâ⬠(2), mainly because Dominican players have such a notable presence and bring positive attention to their impoverished homeland.à This support is by no means unconditional, though; they steadfastly refuse to approach the game with American businesslike gravitas; instead, they treat the game itself somewhat like Carnival, with joy coexisting alongside energetic, intense play. Resistance appears in the way Dominican players relax at home, interacting more freely with fans, who themselves resist American baseballââ¬â¢s decorum by being themselves and creating a festive, effusive, Carnival-like atmosphere.à According to Klein, ââ¬Å"The game remains American in structure, but its setting is Dominican and it has become infused with Dominican valuesâ⬠(149).à Indeed, the park fosters a microcosm of Dominican society, particularly its impoverished economy, and unlike the more slick American baseball business, it does not exclude its marginal activities. In addition to the paid vendors and park employees within the stadium, an illicit economy flourishes both within and on the outside, with self-appointed ââ¬Å"car watchers,â⬠vendors, and ushers (adults and children alike) plying their trade for small fees, and bookmakers work openly, often in the presence of the police, who turn a blind eye to most illegal activity aside from the rare fight. Dominican baseballââ¬â¢s symbolic significance is not a sense of the pastoral heritage, like some in America interpret it; instead, it reflects Dominicansââ¬â¢ sense of themselves being dominated by the United States, and offers a symbolic outlet for striking back. In his preface, Klein writes: ââ¬Å"The tensions between a batter who has two strikes against him and the opposing pitcher are a metaphor for the political and cultural tensions described in this bookâ⬠(xi).à Indeed, the Dominican republicââ¬â¢s deeply entrenched poverty and long domination by foreign powers give it a feeling of vulnerability and compel its people to seek some means of besting the dominant power ââ¬â if not politically or economically, then at least athletically. At the start of the book, Klein states that ââ¬Å"every turn at bat is a candle of hope, every swing is the wave of a banner, the sweeping arc of a swordâ⬠(1).à Indeed, when a Dominican reaches the major leagues and excels, it is not merely an athletic success story but a symbolic invasion and conquest of the conquerorââ¬â¢s territory.à (The United States twice occupied the Dominican Republic in the twentieth century, an ever-present fact in Dominicansââ¬â¢ minds.) Also, the atmosphere in the crowd of a Dominican professional game serves as the countryââ¬â¢s symbolic assertion of its culture in the face of American dominance.à At Santo Domingoââ¬â¢s Quisqueya Stadium, one witnesses ââ¬Å"a mass spectacle that makes simultaneous use of American and Dominican elements. . . . [Baseball] at Quisqueya embodies many of the things that North Americans find blameworthy in Dominican culture ââ¬â lateness, overly casual behavior, inefficiency.à But the Dominicans see these characteristics as a source of pride, and they take their game seriouslyâ⬠(150). The Dominican baseball press is a source of more open resistance; says Klein, ââ¬Å"the press has inadvertently created a Latino universe of discourse, one in which North Americans are conspicuously absentâ⬠(127).à Its journalists display an obvious bias by devoting so much attention to Dominicans in the major leagues that one hardly knows other nationalities even participate. In addition, Dominican baseball writers openly blame Dominican baseballââ¬â¢s problems on American control, protesting a skewed economic relationship that mirrors the larger political and economic imbalance.à They promote much of the publicââ¬â¢s pride, says Klein, but that pride is ââ¬Å"tempered by the view that Dominican baseball is still an adjunct to the American gameâ⬠(121).à Dominican resistance is thus aimed at countering this uncomfortable fact. In baseball terms, American culture interacts with Dominican culture by treating it with some degree of condescension and insensitivity.à Many American baseball professionals are impatient with Dominicansââ¬â¢ loose sense of time, quickly deeming Latino players uncoachable ââ¬Å"head cases,â⬠without looking at the cultural differences. Among Dominicans, says Klein, ââ¬Å"There is none of the regimentation, guardedness, and nervous tension that characterizes players in the United States.à North American managers must take this looseness into account when they go to the Caribbean, for the playersââ¬â¢ conception of the game and of time is as elastic as that of other Dominicansâ⬠(148). Despite the United Statesââ¬â¢ long domination of the Dominican Republic, the small nationââ¬â¢s people feel less anger than a mixture of muted resentment and aspiration to attain American material prosperity and stability, which for most are a distant, unreachable ideal.à Thus, when Dominican ballplayers reach the major leagues, their large salaries represent a sort of victory and source of immense pride for the small island nation.à Says Klein, ââ¬Å"Much as archeological treasures attest to a rich Dominican past, salaries attest to the presentâ⬠(128). Kleinââ¬â¢s study pays keen attention not only to Dominican history but also to the ways in which Dominicans embrace this imported sport but also use their prowess to offer their own subtle response to American political and economic dominance.à The dynamic he describes illustrates not only American hegemony, but also how subordinated peoplesââ¬â¢ identity and spirit can thrive even in the face of foreign domination. Klein, Alan M.à Sugarball.à New Haven: Yale University Press, 1991.
Wednesday, February 12, 2020
Medical Rights Essay Example | Topics and Well Written Essays - 750 words
Medical Rights - Essay Example In addition there are some associations who accomplish affairs such as health farms, consulting rooms or private treatment centers. Such individual corporations are restricted to follow the rule namely, privacy rule covered entities. There are many organizations which possesââ¬â¢ personal information about people and are permitted to expose it. These organizations may be insurance companies, working places, educational institutes, defensive groups or city district offices. These associations are permitted to expose individualââ¬â¢s personal health status, but only for the sack of patientââ¬â¢s health or for some important purpose. These purposes may be for the well consciousness of patientââ¬â¢s health status. This information may also be collected to ensure the condition of patients, as a standard for some organizational or judiciary affairs. The patientââ¬â¢s personal data can also be displayed to some Medicaid or Medicare to aid the patient financially. It can also be exposed for collection of data from the whole community, so that the epidemic infections can be diagnosed by the researchers. Information about the health status of the patient should be protected. This information might be some sort of conversations between the patient and the consulting doctor. The health information shared by the care taker or certain diseases, which have been diagnosed by some laboratories or by means of other parameters, should be secured by the concerned entity. The medical records of the patient in hospitals, working place, or vice versa, must be safe. The demands for payment, checks and receipts are protected by the health care institute. The advices of the doctors are only implemented by the care takers. Therefore it is necessary to share everything with them, but this exchange of knowledge should be very reliable and should be potted without any outflow so that the personal health information
Saturday, February 1, 2020
Business Ethics Week 2 Term Paper Example | Topics and Well Written Essays - 250 words
Business Ethics Week 2 - Term Paper Example ââ¬Å"Eminent Domain shall not be exercised unless it substantially furthers an important Government interest, and with respect to housing unless it specially fulfills an overriding Government purposeâ⬠(Ryskamp, 2007, p. 31). One can accept Eminent Domain as a positive activity if done to take over a decayed or unused area, for constructing institutions like hospitals, schools and other inevitable human requirements, for real economic development of the land, which is in public interest. It will also open up employment avenues and increase revenue of the community. Thus, the final result will be the revitalization of the community around that vicinity. Eminent Domain right will negatively affect individual who are living in that area for a long time, or have been locating their business centre in that area over a considerable period of time. Obviously, their fear that it will affect their business negatively is justified. Therefore, they may not be willing to part with their properly. The confiscation of oneââ¬â¢s property without his full will despite for being a ââ¬Ëjust compensationâ⬠relates to a personââ¬â¢s feelings and emotions. A person apart from the money worth has feelings and memories attached to a place because it might be his or her roots. Therefore, it hampers the individualââ¬â¢s sentiments when the property or place is confiscated without the full permission of the individual. Quality and professional standard will have distinguished improvement and professional entry will be restricted which will help both government and public to avoid malpractices and encourage healthy competition. Renuemaration and wages of the professionals will have positive changes. Demerits includes factors like consumer cost will be relatively higher and it will force the consumer pay more for specialized work. Besides, it will also restrain the mobility of practitioners.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)