Reference no: EM133774952
Case: Migration is a critical part of regional development, global change, and the establishment of cultural, political, and economic networks across societies. When people move they take with them their ‘cultural baggage': language, beliefs, social customs, familial traditions, and so on. Over the last 200 years, migration has significantly affected the American natural and cultural landscapes, as well as each out-migration country around the world.
For this paper, I'd like you to first trace the migration record for your ancestors of at least one side of your family. The easiest way to approach this would be to talk it over with one of your parents or some of your other relatives. You could then supplement this information with data you find from any number of family relics, including photographs, certificates, journal entries, or other unique information specific to your family history. While I want a very in-depth, well written paper, please do not disclose anything that would make you or your family feel uncomfortable or otherwise endanger yourself or them.
- Alternatively, if for some reason you can get no information about your family from your relatives, you may use Ancestry.com or some other ancestry website to get this information. Providing the data from one of these sites is worth extra credit.
- Finally, if you have neither information from your family nor an ancestry service, then you must research the origins of your family's surnames (last name) in order to identify where your family is from. This requires a minimum of three quality sources cited in your essay.
In addition to the discussion of your family's origins, you must include at least three relevant examples of family activities/traditions/events that you take part in and why/where those activities come from. Some of this comes from your ethnic background (depending on what part of the world you come from), but others are based more on family choices. If these are not traditional (passed down due to ethnicity), then choose other things about your culture (religion, food, clothing, language, etc.) that are unique to your family.
This first part also requires a migration history map tracing your family's ancestry for at least three generations (i.e., your parents, your grandparents, and your great-grandparents). You may need to dig deeper if your family has been in one general location longer than three generations.
Map 1: Family Migration Map
Using either the world map provided or a hand-drawn perceptual map of the world, trace your family's migration history. The requirements for this paper include:
1) Identify at least 5 major cities/sites of migration (either the origin and destination points or some other important local migration).
2) Identify whether these migrations were voluntary or involuntary and explain the circumstances as best as you can (either in the paper or on the map).
3) Trace both sides of your parents', grandparents', or families' geographical movements as best as you can and differentiate them on the map
4) Include a legend that explains the important features (including whether a point is supposed to be a city, or a line is for one person or another, etc.).
The map should be neat and as detailed as possible (in color, unless otherwise indicated). It should add to the overall explanation of your paper and serve as a useful tool in assisting your geographical imagination and narrative of your family's migration historyHave fun with this!
NOT ADHERING TO THESE COULD RESULT IN SIGNIFICANT GRADE LOSS
1) 1" margins, Times New Roman (12 pt) font, 1 pg. single-spaced or 2 pgs. double spaced
2) Proper syntax, spelling and grammar
3) One map: one tracing family history
4) Additionally, in your analysis, please use some definitions, discussions, and information from class to support your explanations.