Going to a friend’s house can be a scary experience. Some of their customs that they normally do are weird to you. Why is that? Culture that is introduced to a certain individual can change someone’s point of view. Culture is the behaviors and belief characteristic of a particular social, ethnic, or age group.…
Cultural Identity is something that makes people who they are; it can deeply affect how you see the world because it shapes how you perceive new things. And as a child, many people do not realize the impact observed actions can have on someone when forming cultural identity. How a person grows up can really change who they are as a person, due to the great influence that parents and caregivers have on the children in their early years. Not only that but, when a child is exposed to a new environment or community they can begin to do things differently than their parents and that can begin to change them.…
Mariah Henson Mrs. Love Hilliard Multicultural Lit & Film 30 January 2017 Being Different Isn’t Easy The clothes look great, English is good, personality is the best, shoes match the designer outfit, if only this was enough to fit in. All kids feel the need to be accepted by their peers and most will do almost anything to fit in at school. Cultural and family differences affect student’s self esteem when they are striving to feel accepted even when your look different from those around you. Through the years of growing up, finding a balance between having traditional American values and following your cultural religious beliefs is a life time journey.…
Junior finds himself perplex about his true identity. Throughout the novel he travels back at forth from his reservation with only Native Americans to going to a school out of the reservation Reardan that had mainly white students. On the reservation, Junior is the outcast that doesn’t seem to quite belong. In Reardan, he is Arnold, the traitor of his tribe. He doesn’t know which side to identify with.…
All of my life, either as a joke or seriously, I was told one thing over and over again, "Por que no puedes ser una niña normal?" It translate in English to, "Why can't you just be a normal girl?" As a child I never thought I was different than any other 4 year old. But growing up, the realize came when my friends and family began to ask my about my culture and my relationships. Growing Hispanic had its privileges and disadvantages.…
Although an individual’s experiences may shape one’s positionality, it doesn’t determine positionality. My positionality does not necessarily align with the positionality stereotypes of those who identify in the same groups. My complex personal experiences and background all contribute to my positionality and how I view the world, but doesn’t definitively determine them. In this essay I will argue of all the factors that shape my positionality, the three that have impacted me and my positionality the most are my ethnicity and race, socioeconomic class in my community, and religious upbringing. Often times, race and ethnicity is combined into one conforming definition, but they are separate aspects in the shaping of my positionality.…
Going through small private schools in a little town since I was in kindergarten has set me up for very few cultural experiences but my parents never wanted my siblings and I to grow up like this. When my family goes on vacation my mom always tries to fully submerge us in the culture around us. For example, a few years ago, my family and I went on a vacation in Nuevo Vallarta, Mexico. We stayed in a nice resort and it was never necessary to leave the property if you didn’t want to. Most people never did.…
“Don’t worry Erik, we’ll always have each other,” I would tell my brother as we ate lunch by ourselves under the playscape of the elementary school playground. Growing up as the only two Hispanic children in the small town of Arco, Idaho, I found out very quickly that other children could be the cruelest and most judgmental individuals when it came to the subject of race. Comments like “Why are you here?” and “No one here likes you! ” seemed to summarize my entire existence.…
Through My Eyes Throughout my life I cannot say I looked at my parents as immigrants or ever afraid of being deported to Mexico. I am also the youngest of four so I also was not able to see why parents when they were younger and just being in America. I personally did not see a difference in races being born and raised in Dallas Texas, in a little town called Farmers Branch we were mostly populated with Mexican American with a smaller population of Whites, Blacks, and Asian. Although I did get a little bit of racial backlash from my parents towards other races telling me not to talk to white people because they are crazy, but yet are closest neighbors where white and still to this some of nicest people I’ve ever met.…
In “It’s Hard Enough Being Me,” written by Anna Lisa Raya, Raya is a second generation Mexican-American/Puerto Rican from Los Angeles, In the article she expresses how growing up she never second guessed who she was. Then when she went across the country to attend Columbia in New York City, where she was constantly questioned who she was. She stated how “culture shock and identity crisis are common for the new l mitted collegian who goes away to school”(Raya 122).…
When asked, “What do you believe in?,” some kids might say something cliché like,” I believe sometimes you have to lie to not hurt others.” Some people might even say something irrelevant like, “I believe in dragons.” Some are super original and creative with their beliefs. I, myself, don’t know what I believe in. So what kind of kid am I?…
Who am I? For some people the answer to this question is simple. They are able to answer this question without much thought. However, while some find solace and pride in answering this thought provoking question, it has always stirred in me a feeling of angst and confusion. These uncomfortable feelings emerged because of my interracial background and upbringing.…
Attention Catcher: What is Diversity? Diversity is a range of different things. The concept of diversity encompasses acceptance and respect. It means understanding that each individual is unique, and recognizing our individual differences.…
My Culture Identity Everyone has a culture that identifies their identity. As in who they are or where they come from. They 're many different cultures in the world. A culture is a tradition past on to a family generation. Every culture has different holidays, traditon but more importantly style.…
Everyone has a unique identity and culture they align with. In particular, my cultural identity is that I am Korean American. I was born in America, but grew up in South Korea until I was six. The rest of my childhood was here in America but I would visit South Korea nearly every summer. So I identify as a Korean American.…