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ELA 12: 5.2 I Thee Wed 3 Views
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Description:
Whoa, man. What if it's all just one big social construct?
Transcript
- 00:03
It probably comes as no surprise that marriage has been a big deal for a [Couple getting married]
- 00:07
long time even before it was fashionable to hire multiple photographers at your
- 00:11
wedding, you know so that the secondary photographer can photograph the official [Photographer taking a picture of another photographer]
- 00:15
wedding photographer as she captures the whole magical expensive experience.
- 00:19
Well that said not everyone throughout history has considered marriage the
Full Transcript
- 00:22
bee's knees. In the early 1700s more and more people were starting to argue that [Woman trapped in a cage]
- 00:25
there was something a bit wonky about treating marriage like a business deal,
- 00:28
even though it might not sound revolutionary to us, these folks believed
- 00:33
it wasn't right to trade and sell women like property, go figure. [Man gives the woman in a cage to another man]
- 00:36
Well the philosopher Mary Astell pushed these ideas even further.
- 00:40
She believed not only that women shouldn't be treated like property but
- 00:44
that they should also opt out of marriage entirely because as Admiral
- 00:48
Ackbar would say "it's a trap." Well to understand Astell's perspective it helps [Fish in a spaceship]
- 00:53
if we understand social constructivism. The idea that certain things and ideas
- 00:58
emerge out of society without necessarily needing to exist.
- 01:02
Take facebook, sure it might be a great way to keep in touch with friends and [Boy using Facebook on a laptop]
- 01:06
earn Zuck obscene piles of money but its existence isn't required. The values and
- 01:12
desires of our society helped foster its existence but if it didn't happen to [Mark Zuckerburg behind a huge pile of cash]
- 01:16
exist, well we'd find a way to survive without it and so would Mark Zuckerberg.
- 01:20
This isn't only true of websites but also ideas. Ideas about marriage didn't
- 01:24
just fall from the sky, they were thought up by previous generations of people and [Marriage thought bubbles falling]
- 01:28
taken up by later generations a bit like inherited antiques except ideas about
- 01:33
marriage didn't just spend all their time locked away in cabinets gathering dust.
- 01:36
The idea that marriage is a business deal didn't come out of nowhere, it was
- 01:40
socially constructed by previous generations of men who had selfish [Man brings marriage and business thought bubble together]
- 01:45
interests. Once an idea is clearly seen to be a social construct it's much easier
- 01:49
to dispense with it and try something else. Good news for us, but maybe bad news
- 01:54
for the wedding photographers who want us to believe that no wedding is perfect
- 01:57
without a battalion of shutterbugs. [Priest looks unhappy as lots of pictures are taken]
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