![]() While this happens from birth, most people in Western societies reach a stage in adolescence where maturing cognitive abilities and increased social awareness lead them to begin to reflect on who they are. Our parents, friends, teachers, and the media help shape our identities. Personal, Social, and Cultural IdentitiesĪsk yourself the question “Who am I?” Recall from our earlier discussion of self-concept that we develop a sense of who we are based on what is reflected back on us from other people. It is from these cultural influences that our identities are formed. Last, the definition acknowledges that culture influences our beliefs about what is true and false, our attitudes including our likes and dislikes, our values regarding what is right and wrong, and our behaviors. There is also deviation from and resistance to those patterns by individuals and subgroups within a culture, which is why cultural patterns change over time. Culture is patterned in that there are recognizable widespread similarities among people within a cultural group. The definition also points out that culture is learned, which accounts for the importance of socializing institutions like family, school, peers, and the media. Culture is “negotiated,” and as we will learn later in this chapter, culture is dynamic, and cultural changes can be traced and analyzed to better understand why our society is the way it is. Unpacking the definition, we can see that culture shouldn’t be conceptualized as stable and unchanging. For the purposes of exploring the communicative aspects of culture, we will define culture as the ongoing negotiation of learned and patterned beliefs, attitudes, values, and behaviors. ![]() Diversity as CultureĬulture is a complicated word to define, as there are at least six common ways that culture is used in the United States. This chapter will explore different notions of diversity and invite us to think about how we approach diverse groups of individuals within a small group setting. When someone mentions “diversity,” what do you first think of in your mind? Is it how someone looks? Is it about where their family is from? Does it matter that their ancestors were from “someplace else”? Do you think about who someone might have voted for in a recent election? All of these questions could be how you think about a concept such as diversity. 12 Diversity in Groups: Culture, Identity, and Thought Introduction
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |