Cultural identity,characteristics,culture formation,nature of culture
ST PAUL'S UNIVERSITY
FACULTY OF BUSINESS AND
COMMUNICATION
UNIT TITLE: INTERCULTURAL COMMUNICATION
UNIT CODE: COM 210
STUDENTS NUMBERS: BACS/NRB/1591/17
BACS/NRB/3075/17
LECTURES NAME: MS. LOISE
TASK: Cultural Identity,
Characteristics, Cultural formation, Nature of Culture
INTRODUCTION
Cultural
Identity
According to Shah
“Culture has been defined as the shared features which encapsulate people
together in a community”.
Culture is a set of
control mechanisms, plans, rules and instruments for governing behavior.
Culture begins with the assumption that human thoughts is basically both and
public.
Cultural identity links
a person to their heritage and help the to identify with others who have the
same traditions and basics believe systems. When a person identifies with their
culture they often embrace traditions that have been presents over several
years.
Cultural identity in its
most basics form is a sense of belonging such as companionship, beliefs interest
and basic principles of living. Embracing one culture of certain tribes or
people often means practicing a specific religion or wearing certain types of
clothing or something else that represents their culture.
Examples of cultural
identity
·
Beliefs structure or religion for
example the cross represents Christianity.
·
Dress every tribe has a particular style
of dressing as a culture, same prefers head dress while others choose to wear
nothing that coves their head for example the Muslims.
·
Hair-how a person wears their hair can
also be an indicator of culture identity e.g. Turkana and Pokot ladies usually
have something on their head called”donge”.
·
Types of food eaten some tribes like
okyek normally like to eat wild animals like gazelles, antelopes and many
others because they believe that wild animals graze on green leaves which are
not contaminated. These people also look for natural herbs as their medicine.
Ethnic groups that live along the coast depend on sea food as fish.
·
Examples of cultural identity can
include anything that offer testaments or validation that person is associated
with a particular group religion.
Characteristics
of cultural identity
a) Collective
phenomenon-culture is a partly shared with people who lived or lived within the
same social environment which it was a learnt.
b) It
consists of written rules-cultural identity is a collective program of the mind
that distinguishes the members of one group or category of people from others.
c) It
is a learnt- cultural identity is not something born with but it is a learned,
stored in mental categories that are recalled. It begins after birth or even
earlier.
d) View
of group of people – This means it is shared by a society. People in a given
culture share symbols of the culture such as language.
e) Coherent-
It is an outward expression of a unifying and consistent vision brought by a
particular community to its confrontation.
FORMATION OF CULTURE
Cultural formation has
been define “as a process that trains citizens in the knowledge of their
country and their common humanity while giving them moral and intellectual
virtues” (Steward 2012). This show that Culture formation is not simply a
matter of knowledge. Cultured person is not simply a knowledgeable person but
he is also a good person. This just prove that cultural formation includes the
formation of the virtues both moral and intellectual. Cultural formation is a
process because it begins with a person who is not cultured and transforms them
into cultured person. It is not a process that begins today but it is a long
process that begins from birth. On the other hand, I identity is the concept of
who we are (martin&Nakayama 2011)
Perspective on the formation of cultural
identity
Social
science perspective
According to Martin and
nakayama (2011), this perspective emphasizes that cultural identity is created
in part by the self and in part in relation to group membership. This is
evidence that self is composed of multiple identities and these notions are
culture bound. Our identities are created not in one smooth, orderly process
but in spurts with some events providing insights onto who we are and long
periods intervening during which we may not think much about ourselves or
identities.
Interpretive
perspective
This perspective
emphasizes that identities are negotiated, co-created, reinforced and
challenged though communication with others by emerging when messages are
exchange between persons (jandt 2007). This show that our identities is not a
symbol process but ideas are expressed in core symbols, labels and norms.
Different identities are emphasized depending on the individual we are
communicating with and topics of conversation and our communication is probably
most successful when the person we are talking with confirms the identity we
think is most important at the moment
Critical
perspective
This show that identity
shaped through social historical forces. The driving force here is that attempt
to understands identity formation within the contexts of history, economics and
even discourse. The identities that others may ascribe to us are socially and
politically determined. They are not constructed by self alone but we must ask
ourselves what drives the constructions of a particular kinds of identities for
examples now days, people do not hesitate to identify themselves as
“heterosexuals”. A critical perspective insists that on the constructive nature
of this process and attempts to identify the social forces and needs that gives
rise to this identities.
Characteristics of cultural identities
According to martin and
Nakayama (2011), they describe cultural identities in several ways such as
gender, age, racial and ethnicity, religion, national, regional and personal.
Gender
identity
This is the
identification within cultural notions of masculinity and feminist and what it
mean to be a man or a woman. To establish a gender identity for the newborn,
visitors may ask if the baby is a boy or a girl. What it mean to be a man or a
woman in a society is heavily influenced by cultural norms, for examples, some
activities are considered more masculine or feminine. Gender identity is also
demonstrated by common styles for example, women communication styles is often
described as supportive, egalitarian,
personal and disclosure where’s men are describe as competitive and assertive.
Age
As we age, we also play
into cultural notions of how individuals our age should act, look and behave.
As we grow older, we sometimes look at the clothes displayed in store windows
or advertised in newspapers and magazines and feel that we are either too old
or too young for that “look”. These feelings stem from an understanding what
age means and how we identify with people that age.Some people feel old at age
of 30, others feel young at age of 40 or 50 (jandt 2007). Nothing inherent in
age that tell us we are young or old rather than our notions of age and youth
are based on cultural conventions.
Racial
and ethnic identities
Racial identity is a
process of identifying with particular racial groups. Racial are based on some
extent on physical characteristics but they are also constructed in fluid
social context. It probably makes more sense to talk about racial formation
than racial categories thereby casting race as complex of social meanings
rather than as fixed and objective concept. Ethnic identity may be seen as set
of ideas about own ethnic group membership. It typically includes
self-identification, knowledge about ethnic culture, feelings about belongings
to particular any group.
Religious
identity and National identity
This can be an
important dimension of many people identities as well as important site of
intercultural conflict. Religious identity often is conflated with racial or
ethnic identity which makes it different to view religious identity simply
because of in terms of belonging to a particular religion. People in some
religion communicate and mark their religion differences by their clothing e.g.
Muslims covers their heads to show their religion. On the other hand national
identity refers to one legal status in relation to a nation. You can identify
someone by asking which country he or she is.
Regional
identity
This is an
identification with a specific geographical region of a nation. Although some
regional identities can fuel national independence movements, they more often
reflect cultural identities that affirms distinctive dress, manners and
language.
Personal
identity
This is an act of who
we think we are and who others think we are. Our personal identities are
importance to us and we try to communicate them to others. We are more or less
successful depending others responds to us but the various ways that identify
is constructed to portray ourselves as we want others to see us.
References
Steward.M. (2012).
Cultural formation. U.S.A: Word press
Jandt.E.F. (2007).An introduction to intercultural
communication (5th ed). U.S.A: Sage
publication.Martin.N.J.,Nakayama K.T.(2011).Intercultural
communication in contexts, (4th Ed). New York, NY: MC-Graw-hill
publication
good but work on grammar to improve on your work
ReplyDeleteAgreed
Delete