Cultural assimilation

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    Emilio Siaz Professor Macmillian Professor Macmillian History 17B 23 March 2015 Assimilation Through Cultural Extermination In the eyes of the dominant culture, the idea of assimilation is to help the underdeveloped race of people to prosper along with the dominant population. But in the eyes of the victim, the act of assimilation is an act of cultural genocide. It is this attempt of assimilation that resulted in the development of unresolved grief among the Native American people.…

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    Segmented assimilation theory can be comprised of two parts. First, there is the pattern of immigrants and their children assimilating into the white middle-class. The second pattern involves assimilation yet one that progresses in a downward route to lower- classes (Portes and Zhou 1993: 82). There are factors that determine the vulnerability of a group’s downward assimilation. These are their skin color, location, and the absence of mobility ladders (Portes and Zhou 1993: 83). It is shown that…

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    This video also bring up important point concerning ethnocentrism and cultural relativism. Ethnocentrism is the concept of looking at other cultures, and comparing them in relation to your own culture. Using ethnocentrism usually causes the person to see other cultures as barbaric or inferior, while seeing their own culture…

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    captivity narratives is the “struggle between assimilation and maintaining a seperate cultural identity.” Campbell continues to analysis this genre with the idea that a transformation occurs in the captive that includes accommodation and adoption. These characteristics are outlined in Early American captivity narratives and create a place for the genre to define what is positive assimilation and what is negative. In the historical context, assimilation of a Native American into the…

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    detrimental and impossible to accomplish, illustrates Robert King in his article “Should English Be the Law?” (537). The article, "Debate: Multiculturalism vs. Assimilation”, defines assimilation as the “consistent integration whereby members of an ethno-cultural group (such as immigrants, or…

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    Considering Ava’s context I think of Gibson’s (1983) model of “accommodation without assimilation” and find it to be a better match. According to this perspective, accommodation may happen without assimilation, permitting newcomers to a different culture to integrate aspects of the new culture without necessarily abandoning or substituting their original one. As Gibson would have us think, this…

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    Harry Spiegel Professor Tani Sanchez AFAS 371 7 April 2017 Feel The Noise and Step Up Cultural assimilation is defined as the “process by which a person or a group’s language and/or culture come to resemble those of another group”. (Webster) A good example of this is when someone from a foreign country immigrates to the United States and learns and eventually becomes a part of the American culture. Appropriation is defined as “taking something for one’s own use” (Webster). An example of…

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    Middlesex shows the assimilation process and what comes out at the end of it all, complete loss of culture shapes identity and something unidentifiable takes its place. For Lefty to keep his job at the factory he had to participate in a pageant, the "Ford English School Melting Pot", in which they must take off their 'immigrant costumes" and dress in "blue and gray suits... waving American flags" (104-105). At that point in time and even to this day there is a glorification of one's destruction…

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    Assimilation is inevitable and has been taking place since the 18th century. Native Americans were forcefully assimilated into American culture and society. Today, many foreign groups of individuals are integrated into American society. Many individuals label America as a “melting pot;” however, the nation cannot be given this “nickname” because when people assimilate into American culture, they must abandon their own cultural customs and conform entirely to their “new” society rather than…

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    cultures in a society were all cultures identities are reflected is a term that has become widely known nowadays. This term centers on the thought of how a society should respond to cultural and religious differences. It’s important to clarify that the definition multiculturalism does not include complete assimilation and integration, which causes various problems within groups in society. Many citizens from society debate over whether if multiculturalism is the proper way to deal with…

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