Perspectives
on Culture and Diversity
This week, I reached
out to my brother, sister, husband, oldest son, and friends. I asked them what their definitions for “culture”
and “diversity” were. These are the
responses I received…
Culture
v “Culture
is the norm for a group of people… the way they act, talk, interact, behave,
support one another, dress, etc. They
have customs that are specific to them.
Cultures are everywhere…in a home, school, classroom. Business, church,
club, organization, office, team, etc.”
v “Culture,
in a global perspective, is what makes each country distinct. It is the way of life that makes each group
of people different. In a non-global
perspective, it is each of our historical backgrounds, as well as our learned
traits, that create the way we live.”
v “Culture
is the religion, food, way of life with different ethnicity. Their history and background which makes them
unique and their own culture.”
v “Culture
is a belief system of a particular group. To me that could be as small as
family interactions and traditions or larger groups such as regional groups,
ethnic, or religious. Also, the social
aspect of old versus young generations. Why do we do what we do and how we go
about doing things within those groups.”
v “Culture
is a shared or group identity that a person associate with. Usually based on
traditions, it defines boundaries for a person’s beliefs, actions, and
lifestyle. A culture can also be based upon a profession, religion, or any
commonality that a person identifies or wants to identify with. Sometimes used
as a justification for the infringement on the beliefs of others.”
v “Cultures
have mores-unwritten expectations that are deeply ingrained, formed from shared
values and beliefs. People find identity
and a sense of belonging from these expectations.”
Diversity
v “Diversity
means everyone is not the same in race, sex appearance, religion, likes,
dislikes, beliefs, cultures, experiences, sexuality, socioeconomic status
(SES), abilities, etc. The differences
are accepted, appreciated, and respected.”
v “Diversity
is when many cultures are living and existing together.”
v “Diversity
is different ethnic groups of people living and working together. All have different cultural backgrounds and
have their own way of lifestyle.”
v “Diversity
is the differences within all of these groups.
For example, my husband and I realized how broad diversity was when we
were looking for a church. We had always
been Baptist but wanted to explore. What
we found, even within the Baptist churches was that there were many points of
differences within all of them. Whether
they were southern, central, etc. Some
were still traditional (white only, older traditional music only). Some were more contemporary and seem to
forget about the old parishioners, and some offered both traditional and contemporary while also encoring opportunities to work together. To us that was where we wanted to be. Where
differences are accepted and even celebrated.”
v “Diversity
is broad, many faceted, diversity is the use of a bigger realm or field than a
single item or concept. To me, cultural
diversity is an awareness for the beliefs and lifestyles of cultures different
from your own. Does not necessitate a respect for the difference, just an
acknowledgment that a difference exists.”
v “Diversity
is a broad spectrum of differences within a group. The more people are exposed
to diversity the more there is a chance for acceptance of different cultures,
view, uniqueness, and lifestyles.”
Six different
definitions from men and women ranging between the ages of twenty-two to fifty-five. These definitions were their definitions composed
based on their individual knowledge, experience, and belief. The overall theme or definition of culture
was the identity shared by a group of people based on their beliefs, region,
way of life, language, et al. while diversity is the acceptance, respect,
celebration of similarities and differences between individuals and cultures. Six different individuals gave different definitions
with a unified theme. That is powerful!!
My favorite definition is "Diversity is a broad spectrum of differences within a group." I think making the definition of diversity too narrow is troubling. If or when you do that you take away for the the potential of differences.
ReplyDeleteDonna,
ReplyDeleteYour conversations about culture and diversity truly show how diverse our communities are. Even within your own family the definitions offered differing responses and that is truly how I feel culture is. I like how subcultures were highlighted within the diversity section. While many assume that a culture or please is all the same there is always some other factor at play that can change something from what someone may have originally thought it to be, such as a religion. The neighborhood I last lived in had a large Mormon population but I was surprised to learn that even within these few families how varied it was in terms of socializing as well as which temples each family attended. While we often tend to lump groups, taking the time to delve deeper shows true diversity.
Hi Donna,
ReplyDeleteOnce again, I enjoyed reading your blog this week. I enjoyed reading the responses your family members gave you about culture and diversity. They all had their own unique way of defining both. I too found it very interesting to read about Diversity being a broad spectrum of differences in a group.
Greetings Donna,
ReplyDeleteI enjoyed reading your post!! I also found it interesting how similar the responses were. I really admired this definition of diversity, "diversity is a broad spectrum of differences within a group. The more people are exposed to diversity the more there is a chance for acceptance of different cultures, view, uniqueness, and lifestyles."