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The Enlightenment Of People On Identity By Judith Ortiz Cofer

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The Enlightenment Of People On Identity The identities of an individual may differ from how they see themselves to how others see them, and this is known as a personal and a social identity. People are often misinformed about another person’s, or group of people's social identities through stereotypes or bad experiences. For some people such as Brent Staples and Judith Ortiz Cofer, this has led to many awkward and potentially dangerous situations. Brent Staples is an African American journalist for the New York Times and was a professor of psychology. During his graduate years at the University of Chicago, he found many situations that were potentially dangerous because of people who had either stereotyped him or categorized him based …show more content…

Staples learned of his inheritance one night in Chicago where he was doing his graduate work at the university. “ To her, the youngish black man - a broad six feet two inches with a beard and billowing hair, both hands shoved into the pockets of a bulky military jacket - seemed menacingly close. After a few more quick glimpses, she picked up her pace and was soon running in earnest”(Staples 19).Also, Staples would say that “he learned that he had the ability to alter public space in ugly ways.” Staples understood the history he had to carry of being an African American male. With this realization under the belt, he would start to notice other instances of his history and stereotypes being an issue to his day to day life. Cofer also learned of the difference between her Puerto Rican culture and American culture and the stereotypes formed through their cultural clashes. I think that one such instance of the cultural clash was not beneficial for either party in terms of social identity. “ ...With both hands over his heart, he broke into an Irish rendition of ‘Maria’ from west side story. My politely amused fellow passengers gave his lovely voice the round of gentle applause that it deserved. Though I was not quite as amused, I managed my version of an English smile…”(Ortiz Cofer 203). Although she knew that she could not rid herself of the way she looks, She …show more content…

Cofer found out about the difference in culture one day at school in New Jersey. “The way that our teachers and classmates looked at us that day in school was just a taste of the culture clash that awaited us in the real world, where prospective employers and men on the street would often misinterpret our tight skirts and jiggly bracelets as a come-on.”(Ortiz Cofer 205) During the 1970’s the over sexualization of latinas were commonplace in the media and through stereotypes which labeled them in terms of their preconceived sexuality. As with the situation with the man who sang "Maria", Cofer realized that misinformation about her culture and stereotypes would cause people, specifically male, to approach her and others like her as sexual objects. On the other hand, Staples had the opposite effect on those in the community. “ I could cross in front of a car stopped at a traffic light and elicit the thunk, thunk, thunk. thunk of the driver - black, white, male, or female - hammering down the door locks. On less traveled streets after dark, I grew accustomed to but never comfortable with people crossing to the other side of the street rather than pass me”(Staples 20). These instances illustrated that fear caused by history full of conflict and stereotypes had control over his community. This fear created a social identity of

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