Wednesday, December 7, 2011

The Islamic Woman's Struggle

http://unc.voicethread.com/share/2525482/

The Mystery Behind the Veil

Cubism and Composition with Three Figures

Untitled (Canada)

Henri Matisse: Open Window

Growing Up In Sparkle City

Spartanburg, South Carolina has had a definite impact on my family. My mother, Lynn Costine, was born in Asheville, North Carolina, but at a very young age her family moved to Spartanburg. Her parents chose to move their because her father, Luke Wilburn, was hired to work as a paton attorney for Milliken, one of the big European companies that Spartanburg attracted. My father, Andrew Costine, was born in Maine, but his family also moved to Spartanburg when he was very young. His family was also attracted to Spartanburg because his father worked as an engineer for several different companies, including Milliken. Because Spartanburg offered so many job options both my parents ended up growing up there. It is where they met, it is where they got married, and it is where I was born. Both of my parents attended Spartan High School, a huge school with several thousand students. They never knew each other in high school because my father is four years older than my mother, so he had graduated by the time she was a freshman. Still, the both remember the same teachers and the same traditions, Spartan High had a definite impact on their lives. My father attended the University of Tenessee for about a year and a half, before droping out because his parents would only pay for a business major. He moved back to Spartanburg, where he lived with his best friend from high school- and his best friend still today- Eli Frances. When my mom was a senior in high school she met my father through a mutual friend. She attended the College of Charleston, and then took a year off college to live in Spartanburg with my father. She finished her degree at the University of South Carolina at Columbia, and then moved to Spartanburg. Although both my parents left Spartanburg off and on while they were young, they always ended up coming back to Spartanburg. It was where they both grew up, and it is what brought them together. After working several odd jobs, my father settled into a job working with his best friend, Eli, at Stoeffurs, a large food company in Spartanburg. After my mom graduated from college, she and my father were married at the Piedmont Club of Spartanburg which her parents were members of. They lived and worked in Spartanburg for six years, during which I was born. When I was two years old my parents decided to move to North Carolina to the small town of Tryon, where I grew up. Although I was not raised in Spartanburg, it is still very important city to me. Tryon is just thirty minutes away from Spartanburg, and it is where the closest shopping center is, so I actually spend a lot of time together. My mother’s parents decided to stay in Spartanburg, and her mother still lives in the house that she grew up in. Both of my parents have very fond memories of growing up in Spartanburg. It is truly amazing how much a place can affect a person’s whole life. It is important for everyone to know and to understand their family and what affected them most in their lives. Personally, I have never liked Spartanburg that much, but learning more about it and realizing how much it affect my parents, and therefore my own, life has given me a greater appreciation for it. I am sure that I will want to share my experiences of Spartanburg with my own children- Sunday lunches at my grandmother’s house, Baskin Robbins ice cream, and the Unitarian church are just a few of my childhood memories that revolve around it. Spartanburg is a remarkable place that has made incredible leaps and bounds in the past fifty years, and it is only getting better. I know that I will always be proud to say that my family is from Spartanburg, South Carolina.

Cassandra Perkins

Cassandra Perkins grew up a typical modern American. Her parents are divorced and she lives with her mother in the small town of Bethesda Maryland, just outside of Washington D.C. Although Cassandra does have two brothers, they are both a lot older than her and she didn’t really grow up with them. Cassandra says she ate a lot of frozen dinners growing up because her mom isn’t much of a cook, but when she did cook it was mainly rice beans, and meat. She says that it is very difficult for her to imagine eating a meal that doesn’t include some kind of meat- she considers it the focal point of the meal. Cassandra is a freshman at The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, and therefor she was required to read “Eating Animals” by Jonathan Safran Foer this past summer along with the rest of her class. “Eating Animals” is a wonderful commentary on the impact that food- especially meat- has on our modern lives. Cassandra is a prime example of this impact, she has grown up eating meat on a very regular basis, and it’s even in her family heritage. Her mother’s family is Puerto Rican, and she says that nearly every dish they serve incorporates meat somehow. Cassandra says that she would definitely not consider herself to be a picky eater. She has always been open to trying new things but she has said that she “gets sick of the same food easily”. Although meat may be the focal point of her every meal Cassandra still enjoys variety in the way that it is cooked/ what it is cooked with. She says that her favorite food is “crab, because you can only get it in the summer”. The seasonal nature of crab forces Cassandra to not become sick of it. Cassandra says that her least favorite foods are orange juice and apple sauce, she feels that both of these have too sweet of a taste. Despite Cassandra’s lack of fear for trying new things she still prefers the meats and rice that she grew up eating to the sweeter taste of fruit. She describes it as a “sickly sweet taste. Growing up, Cassandra never considered vegetarianism. To her it was just never a realistic option and never something that she had even considered to be positive. After reading “Eating Animals” Cassandra was able to see both sides of the argument, the book had profound impact on her views of meat eating and where the meat had to come from. After reading the book Cassandra seriously considered going vegetarian for a while. Eventually, she decided to not because it would be too difficult a thing under the circumstances of her lifestyle. Her family would not understand, and it would be difficult for her to appreciate family gatherings- which often revolve around food- when she could not eat anything that it’s being served. Cassandra’s plight is something that many young college students may find themselves facing. As they step outside the boundaries of their families home- where they just what their mom served them, they must make some genuine decisions about what they are going to eat. Many, like Cassandra, come from meat eating families and are just learning about the possibilities and flexibility of being a vegetarian. Many may make the decision to change their lifestyle. While others, like Cassandra, will decide that for the sake of their background, and their heritage they will continue to eat the way they always have.