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Ethnic Identity Research Paper

Decent Essays

What is Identity?
Identity is the concept of who we are. Not only is identity the process by which we describe ourselves (avowal), but it is the process by which others view us as well (ascription). Identity plays an important part in intercultural communication, acting as a link between culture and communication. Communication with our family, friends, and people from different cultures helps us to understand ourselves and our identity, and it is through communication that we express that identity to others.
Identities are created through communication, and they do not develop smoothly, but in fits and spurts, over a long period of time. Additionally, we do not have one identity, but multiple identities, which are dynamic, and influenced by …show more content…

Racial and Ethnic Identity
Many researchers now concur that there are more physical similarities than differences among purported races and have abandoned using strict biological criteria when attempting to classify racial groups. Instead, taking a more social-scientific approach to understanding race, scientists recognize that racial categories like White and Black are constructed in social and historical contexts.
As a matter of fact, racial categories vary widely throughout the world. In the U.S., the demarcations between White and Black are relatively inflexible, and many people become uncomfortable when they cannot easily categorize others. By contrast, Brazil recognizes a wide variety of intermediate racial categories, from White to Black, and everything in between. This indicates a cultural, rather than a biological, basis for racial classification (Trimble & Dickson, 2010).
Racial identities are based to a certain extent on physical characteristics, but they are also constructed in fluid social contexts. The critical part to keep in mind is that the way people construct these identities, and think about race, influences how they communicate with …show more content…

In the mid-1700s, a husky woman was considered attractive, and in many societies today, such as in the Middle East or popular African-American culture here in the U.S., full-figured women are more desirable than thin women, just ask Sir-Mix-A-Lot or Nikki Manaj. This indicates that the idea of gender identity is both dynamic and closely connected to culture (Kos-Read, 2016). Not everyone aspires to a single ideal, but we do attempt to convey our gender identities as facet of who we are.
Our sexual identities should not be mistaken for our gender identities. Sexual identity is complex, particularly since different cultures organize sexualities in different ways. While many cultures have similar categories for male/female and masculine/feminine, others have very different definitions of sexualities. For example, in the U.S. today, we often referred to categories such as heterosexual, gay, lesbian, and bisexual; yet the development of these categories is largely a late-19th-century invention (Kos-Read,

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