Essay #2: The American
Brand of Crazy
Globalization is one
of the most important social forces in our lives today. More than ever before
in human history, people all over the world are listening to the same kinds of
music, eating the same kinds of food, wearing the same kinds of clothing. Many
of the lifestyles and fashions that people worldwide are adopting originated in
the world’s wealthiest countries, especially the United
States. America has a huge influence on the culture of other places: just think of the places all over the globe where people eat McDonald’s hamburgers and drink Cokes, where people wear Nike shoes and watch Hollywood movies.
States. America has a huge influence on the culture of other places: just think of the places all over the globe where people eat McDonald’s hamburgers and drink Cokes, where people wear Nike shoes and watch Hollywood movies.
In an article in New
York Times Magazine, Ethan Watters argues that America has another
important export for the other countries of the world: our view of mental
illness. According to Watters, Americans commonly assume that mental illnesses
like depression are the same all over the world. However, Watters contends that
these conditions are in fact culturally constructed—that is to say, different
cultures view depression very differently. And, for better and worse, the
American concept of what depression means has started to dominate the whole
globe.
For this out-of-class
essay, I’d like you to read Watters’ argument carefully. The name of the
article is “The Americanization of Mental Illness,” and it appeared in New
York Times Magazine on January 8, 2010. Once you have read the piece, I’d
like you to write an essay evaluating and responding to a claim Watters makes
in the end of his article: “Some philosophers and psychiatrists have suggested
that we are investing our great wealth in researching and treating mental
illness — medicalizing ever larger swaths of human experience — because we have
rather suddenly lost older belief systems that once gave meaning and context to
mental suffering.” What does this claim mean? Is it true? What evidence does
Watters produce to support it? What other evidence from other sources can you
find that also supports this claim (or that undercuts it?) This part of the
essay needs to be between 900 and 1000 words.
A second part of the
essay will be the last page (before the Works Cited page). On this page you
will place a cartoon (about 1/3 of the page) and then write a rhetorical
analysis of the cartoon. Refer to the textbook and the questions we practiced
for the homework readings for a guideline
In grading this paper,
I will evaluate your performance on all six criteria from your “What Makes a
Good WR 122 Essay?” sheet: focus, development, audience awareness,
organization, correctness, and effective research. Regarding the last two
criteria, I’m expecting that your paper be as clean and as well edited as you
can make it. I expect your paper to be word processed with 12 point type,
double-spaced, in an academic font such as Times New Roman, with no spelling
errors, and proofread. Regarding grammar, I will be evaluating your performance
on all of the aspects of Standard Written English. Regarding citations, you
will need to refer to between three and four recent (2006 or later) periodical
articles from the MHCC database (you should include the article from New
York Times Magazine as one of these). Both the in-text citations and Works Cited
page should appear in correct MLA format.
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