Saturday, November 14, 2015

Perspectives on Diversity and Culture


For this assignment I spoke with my husband and a few friends, all of which are at least in one way culturally different from myself.  I asked a few extra people just to make sure that I had at least three and then I couldn't decide which ones to select so I will include them all.


Definitions of Culture:

Culture is the culmination of ancestry, customs, traditions, practices and behaviors that dictates who we are and how we act.

So I went to sleep last night fleshing out what culture means to me and realized I was only capturing it from a personal stance as an afro-latina, and not the term itself, and my mind had a full out conversation covering the many ways culture is applied outside of my identity, such as with rape culture. In the end, for right now, culture has 2 definitions for me: 1) the rituals, language, art, and energy tied to one's historical practice of their ancestors. 2) the unspoken practice of habits tied to someone's environment, that individuals may or may not be an active participant of.

Culture is what we have been inculcated with based on the values of our families and community organizations (church, military, etc).

Culture is the common world view that associates you with a certain area/region/country or group. It shapes how you view the world and how the world see's you.




Definitions of Diversity:

 Diversity is the recognition of the collective uniqueness of people and the traits that make them unique or different from each other.

Diversity defies boundaries: diversity of age, sex, gender, thought, experience, etc

Diversity is best defined by the lack of similarity. In terms of social science, it is a dissimilar cultural basis



I believe that all the aspects that were mentioned in the definitions were discussed and studied. I realized that some aspects that were omitted are how culture even impacts our body language and parenting styles.  Reflecting on what other people’s definitions of culture and diversity are provided me with another example of how when asking people the same questions, the answers are going to be different due to their personal experiences.  Depending on what people consider as important to culture and diversity and impacts them, that is what they included in their definitions.




2 comments:

  1. Jill, I read your post and I do agree with your definition of culture and diversity, I have a definition from a co-worker that live in Indian, and her definition of their culture is a way of living of the people. their languagas, religions, dance, music, architeture, food and customs differ from place to place within the country. The Indian culture, often labled as an amalgamation of several cultures, spans across the Indian subontinent and has been influenced by a history that is several millennia old. Great post and thanks for share this information.

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  2. Jill, What was to impressive to me, was that when I asked that questions the responses that I received weren't that far off of the true definition. They were really aligned with everything that we have learned over the past few weeks.
    Great post!

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