Ethnicity. What can you say about Alias, there are just so many reasons to watch it: it’s amazing; witty; dark; has a fascinating Rambaldi backplot; has.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Culture Culture has been called "the way of life for an entire society." As such, it includes codes of manners, dress, language, religion, rituals, norms.
Advertisements

La Identidad.
A Blueprint for Multicultural Understanding Culture is a group that shares a program for survival, values, ideations, and shared symbols” and perpetuates.
Cultural Identity: Race and Ethnicity
Characteristics of Culture
Single-Group Studies Based on C.E. Sleeter & C.A. Grant (2003). Making Choices for Multicultural Education (4 th Ed.)
Cultural Identity: Race, Ethnicity, and Nationalism Culture groups Culture groups Based on social and racial characteristics (language, religion, race,
“A race is a category of people treated as distinct on account of physical characteristics to which social importance has been assigned” (Brinkerhoff,
Kin, Tribe, Ethnicity, Caste, Class, Nation: Patterns of Social Stratification Ideologies of ‘blood’ and ideologies of ‘kind’
Adding in Race, Culture and Ethnicity (Powell 17-36)
Clothing reveals: -both the themes and the formal relationships which serve a culture as orienting ideas, and - the real or imagined basis according to.
Identity. Concepts of the Individual, self, person in anthropology Individual as member of humankind (biologistic) Self as locus of experience (psychologistic)
Caste, race, ethnicity, nationality Are cultural inventions designed to create boundaries around one or another imagined community. Are cultural inventions.
Social 20-1 Textbook: pg   “a belief in nation”  “a shared sense of kinship or belonging”  “a shared collective consciousness of a collective.
What is identity? In the social sciences, the term identity refers to a group’s or individual’s sense of who they are. Psychologists Sigmund Freud and.
Also known as Human Geography Hanks HS
The Diverse Nature of Healthcare patients/clients.
Cultural Identity: Race and Ethnicity
Cultural Identity: Race and Ethnicity Culture groups Few or many characteristics (language, religion, race, food, etc.) Subculture Races Single species.
© CSCOPE 2009 Introduction to Cultural Geography Also known as Human Geography.
Race, Culture and American Society. All of the World Is a Stage Saturday Reader.
Ethno-cultural groups in Population Censuses An evaluation of the UNECE/EUROSTAT Recommendations for Population Censuses and proposals for the 2010 round.
What’s the Deal with Culture?
Race and Ethnicity.
What is race?. Race as a social construction (read page 162) The thought among academics is that race is best thought of as a social construction A social.
What is Race? Race – classification of groups of people based on inherited physical characteristics Europeans (1800’s) categorized people on perceived.
Differences among groups of people that, together make up the whole of humanity A human issue that embraces and benefits all people; it is not a code.
Race Since ancient times, people have attempted to group humans in racial categories based on physical characteristics Historically scholars have placed.
History of Ukrainian Culture Micro-teaching Vasyl Malikov Academic Teaching Excellence Kyiv 2015.
Unit #2 – Human/Cultural Geography The Worlds People.
Community and family cultural assessment Lecture Clinical Application for Community Health Nursing (NUR 417)
Race and Ethnicity.
Discussion Questions for “Mother Tongue”
Identity: Race, Ethnicity, and Place
Race and Ethnicity as Lived Experience
Race and Ethnicity.
Cultural Awareness PART 1 – UNIT II. Content Overview By the end of this lesson, students should be able to:  Define the term culture  Define herself.
Ethnicity AIM: How do we differentiate between ethnicity and race?
Race, Ethnicity, and the Social Structure. Race Race is often thought of as the sorting of humankind into biologically distinct groups based on observable.
Ethnic identity Definition A population of shared kinship (real or perceived) and culture Descent Religion, language, customs, historical myths.
Cultural Identity: Race and Ethnicity Culture groups –Few or many characteristics (language, religion, race, food, etc.) –Subculture Races –Single species.
EXPLORING NATIONALISM. Focus Questions To what extent should nation be the foundation of identity? To what extent should nation be the foundation of identity?
Chapter 1 Are nation and identity related?. Nation vs. Country In order for us to understand more about nationalism we must first explore the difference.
TEST YOUR KNOWLEDGE! What do you know about race and ethnicity?
Copyright © 2013, 2010, 2007 Pearson Education, Inc. All Rights Reserved. An Introduction to Human Communication This multimedia product and its contents.
Understandings of Identity. Chapter 1 – Thinking About Identity and Ideologies2 To What Extent are Ideology and Identity Interrelated? Question for Inquiry.
What is Culture and its Influence on Socialization?
CHAPTER 12: RACE AND ETHNICITY
Understanding the Key Terms
Unit 5:Violence Definitions
Chp. 1 Understandings of Nation and Nationalism
Cultural Anthropology
Cultural Identity: Race and Ethnicity
Cultural Identity: Race and Ethnicity
What is a Nation? Chapter 1 (Part 1).
Cultural Identity: Race and Ethnicity
Ethnic Studies Vocabulary
Multicultural Terms to Know
Define race, ethnicity, and minority in sociological terms.
Characteristics of Culture
Chapter 10: S.1: Racial and Ethnic Relations
Chapter 7: Ethnicity.
The Makeup of Societies
What are some Concepts of Nation?
Minority, Race, and Ethnicity
To what extent are nation and identity related?
RACE Is it real?.
What is a Nation? Chapter 1 (Part 1).
Multicultural Terms to Know
Introduction to Culture Unit
Presentation transcript:

Ethnicity

What can you say about Alias, there are just so many reasons to watch it: it’s amazing; witty; dark; has a fascinating Rambaldi backplot; has Jennifer Garner; brilliant makeup artists. The awards it has collected (or is it garnered) have been well deserved. Makeup credits are on the main Alias page.Alias

One Definition The concept of ethnicity is somewhat multidimensional as it includes aspects such as race, origin or ancestry, identity, language and religion. It may also include more subtle dimensions such as culture, the arts, customs and beliefs and even practices such as dress and food preparation. It is also dynamic and in a constant state of flux. It will change as a result of new immigration flows, blending and intermarriage, and new identities may be formed. (Statistics Canada) The concept of ethnicity is somewhat multidimensional as it includes aspects such as race, origin or ancestry, identity, language and religion. It may also include more subtle dimensions such as culture, the arts, customs and beliefs and even practices such as dress and food preparation. It is also dynamic and in a constant state of flux. It will change as a result of new immigration flows, blending and intermarriage, and new identities may be formed. (Statistics Canada)

WordNet Dictionary Ethnicity is the cultural characteristics that connect a particular group or groups of people to each other. "Ethnicity" is sometimes used as a euphemism for “race", or as a synonym for minority group. While ethnicity and race are related concepts, the concept of ethnicity is rooted in the idea of societal groups, marked especially by shared nationality, tribal affiliation, religious faith, shared language, or cultural and traditional origins and backgrounds, whereas race is rooted in the idea of biological classification of homo sapiens to subspecies according to morphological features such as skin color or facial characteristics. Ethnicity is the cultural characteristics that connect a particular group or groups of people to each other. "Ethnicity" is sometimes used as a euphemism for “race", or as a synonym for minority group. While ethnicity and race are related concepts, the concept of ethnicity is rooted in the idea of societal groups, marked especially by shared nationality, tribal affiliation, religious faith, shared language, or cultural and traditional origins and backgrounds, whereas race is rooted in the idea of biological classification of homo sapiens to subspecies according to morphological features such as skin color or facial characteristics. It is a term also used to justify real or imagined historic ties as well. In English, Ethnicity goes far beyond the modern ties of a person to a particular nation (e.g., citizenship), and focuses more upon the connection to a perceived shared past and culture. In other languages, the corresponding terms for ethnicity and nationhood can be closer to each other. The 19th century saw the development of the political ideology of ethnic nationalism, when the vague concept of race was tied to nationalism, first by German theorists including Johann Gottfried von Herder.

Questions Do you think of yourself as a member of an ethnic group? Do you think of yourself as a member of an ethnic group? –If so, what is it?  What defines your group? –If not, why not? How does ethnicity relate to majority or minority status? How does ethnicity relate to majority or minority status?

Thomas Hylland Ericksen Ethnicity is an aspect of social relationship between agents who consider themselves as being culturally distinctive from members of other groups with whom they have a minimum of regular interaction. It can thus also be defined as a social identity (based on a contrast vis-a-vis others) characterised by metaphoric or fictive kinship (Yelvington, 1991: 168). When cultural differences regularly make a difference in interaction between members of groups, the social relationship has an ethnic element. Ethnicity refers both to aspects of gain and loss in interaction, and to aspects of meaning in the creation of identity. In this way, it has a political, organisational aspect as well as a symbolic one. Ethnic groups tend to have myths of common origin, and they nearly always have ideologies encouraging endogamy, which may nevertheless be of highly varying practical importance. Ethnicity is an aspect of social relationship between agents who consider themselves as being culturally distinctive from members of other groups with whom they have a minimum of regular interaction. It can thus also be defined as a social identity (based on a contrast vis-a-vis others) characterised by metaphoric or fictive kinship (Yelvington, 1991: 168). When cultural differences regularly make a difference in interaction between members of groups, the social relationship has an ethnic element. Ethnicity refers both to aspects of gain and loss in interaction, and to aspects of meaning in the creation of identity. In this way, it has a political, organisational aspect as well as a symbolic one. Ethnic groups tend to have myths of common origin, and they nearly always have ideologies encouraging endogamy, which may nevertheless be of highly varying practical importance.