The Value Of Cultural Identity

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Point of View & Cultural Identity Cultural identity is the identity or feeling of belonging in a group. It is a part of a person’s self-conception and self-perception, and is related to nationality, ethnicity, religion, social class, generation, locality or any kind of social group that has its own distinct culture. Cultural identity is important. It is a huge part of our lives. It shapes who we are and how we see the world. One person may not see the world one way and another person does because they have a different background. Cultural identity impacts how anyone views certain things. When the Charleston Church Shooting happened in 2015, as a black person I was sadden, sick and confused about how the murderer was treated. The murderer had mental issues, obviously, but he took innocent people’s lives and if he were black or brown, he would've probably been shot on sight. When investigating crimes that black people or Muslim/middle-eastern, it seems like investigators or court never talk about the possibility that the suspect may have been mentally disabled. It seems they immediately go to terrorist and thug, but when it’s a white person, it seems like mental issues are something the court or investigators definitely consider. To me the …show more content…
Family oriented people may identify more with love, happiness, and being close. People who aren’t very close to their families may be less trusting of other people and direct. What one person feels is significant like a photograph may be useless to the other. “Under my bed was dress box spilling with old pictures, a sift of lost faces to drift beneath my dreams. I am from those moments--snapped before I budded--leaf-fall from the family tree.” (Lyon) A less family oriented person wouldn’t care about old photos, moments with the family, or family trees, but to someone who is close to their family, they mean