American Identity Essay

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    When European settlers arrived, they met the Native Americans currently occupying the land and saw opportunity. Opportunity, to use Native people as a tool, taking their culture to help their own agendas. For hundreds of years Americans have maintained the practice of bending Native culture to make it their own truths. In doing so, White Americans have oppressed Native People while simultaneously obsessing over their culture. The film, Reel Injun narrated by Neil Diamond, and book, Playing Indian

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    been conducted on African American cultural identity. For research report, few of them were read. In the researches consulted in order to conduct this study different names were used to name identity and various variables were found to explain identity. In their respective studies, Croker (1991), Livingston (2010), Rowley (1998), and Hughes (1989), use the concept of self -esteem to name cultural identity. Monteith (1999) uses the concept of race attitude in place of identity. Hitlin (2003) uses the

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    census Bureau, Asian Americans comprised about 5.6% of the entire population in the United States. However, compared to other races in the United States, Asian Americans are still more likely to be neglected. They are more like guests than hosts in this country. The perpetual foreigner is a particular adjective to describe Asian Americans. Moreover, this neglecting comes from both inside and outside. In other words, not just other races have stereotypes or discrimination

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    How the American Identity is Created The American Identity. Such a broad term for such few words. Americans all have one thing in common. Whether you were born into riches or raised in the slums we all have have faced our struggles and persevered through them. The American dream is to make it big, become wealthy, live a spectacular life. Yet, some of the biggest success stories, came from the slums. People might of doubted them or told them they can’t do or be that (Whiteman, 101). They’ll try

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    or Brown you are an American” If your color of skin, your race, or where you came from do not matter can you be an American and how can you shape America? Immigrants have helped shape American identity by rethinking race and creating a new image of what it means to be American. In the article, “Blaxicans and Other Reinvented Americans” Richard Rodriguez illustrates, “...-black over white, for example. But this girl said that her mother was Mexican and her father was American. This girl said “‘Blaxicans

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    Niko Hudecek The Identity of Resistance The humanity of African slaves was completely annihilated on their transatlantic journeys to America. Stolen of everything tying them to their former lives, enslaved Africans who didn’t suffer physical death on slave ships often faced a “social death” that utterly devastated their sense of identity. (Smallwood, 30) Replacing this void of identity came the institutional force of commodification. But there were many ways that African Americans resisted this dehumanising

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    In Asian American studies, identity is “a set of characteristics or a description that distinguishes a person or thing from others” (Ho 125). One would have to truly perceive his or her culture, language, beliefs, customs and values in order to be viewed as a distinct person in terms of identity. However, many Asian Americans are often faced with personal struggles when they are finding their own identity. These included the issues of assimilation, and contradictions of race and identity within their

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    into individuals due to their cultural backgrounds and thus form what is known as cultural identity, when one establishes their identity based on traditions such as music, food, fashion, language and/or religion ("Common Ground"). Growing up Mexican-American was like living in two different worlds, these worlds shaped the person I am today. It was the culture and beliefs that helped me create my cultural identity. I may even say that I got the best of both worlds. Being of Mexican heritage and being

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    In the book Hotel on the Corner of Bitter and Sweet, the Author, Jamie Ford, illustrates American identity as something that comes in several different spectrums, but encompassing the same basic ideas that shaped our country in the first place through characters such as Mr.Okabe and Mr.Lee. Our country was based off of standing up and fighting for what we believe in. This is exactly what both Mr.Lee and Mr.Okabe do. Mr.Lee stays loyal to what he thinks is right even when not everyone in his surrounding

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    that Asian Americans have been in Hollywood for decades, there are very few positive representations of them in film. More often than not, they’ve been depicted as stereotypical caricatures, and more specifically, as foreigners who can’t speak grammatically correct English. Moreover, the negative representations of Asian Americans in film has perpetuated certain misconceptions about their culture. Chan is Missing (1982) calls for more genuine representations of Asian American identities through its

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