The Importance Of Culture And Black Culture

844 Words2 Pages

Some people are more successful than others while others work their butt off every day and cannot seem to ever fulfill the satisfaction of certain desired goals. There are various factors for the explanation of one’s failure to compete or succeed against another, such as intelligence, luck, talents, and so on. The most important element would be the environment or the culture itself, the person is born into. Like how some people are more successful than others, certain races are better than others. Every race has developed its own culture, and not all cultures are created equal due to the diversity between them. Any culture can be inferior to another, but there is much controversy over the diversity of the mainstream culture and black …show more content…

At a historical standpoint, the racial pride of Americans belonging to the European descent had greatly affected Americans of the African descent, that it also triggered the yearning for superiority within African Americans overtime. This feeling of superiority from certain races or countries can be known as nationalism. As Walter L. Daykin, a professor of Commerce, says nationalism is the “attitudes and beliefs developed in a conflict situation […] at the same time isolate these groups from the large inclusive group” (258). If one group were to feel intimidated by a certain group’s superiority, then they would try to fight that intimidation by putting themselves in danger of isolation. It is important to understand the diversity of the black culture because their history had “limited aspects” that caused nationalism. According to Robert Cherry, a professor of Economics, argues that other races could overcome their inferiority but there were “little possibility that African Americans as a group could attain equality” (Cherry 1120). For example, since blacks were once in the slave trade under the rule of whites, they struggled to receive recognition and to …show more content…

Nationalism and oppression have lots of meaning behind them because of their huge history and how people perceive them in different ways. As explained earlier, nationalism is the racial pride resulting in superiority within a group. In contrast, oppression has barriers that impede movement within a group. Nationalism may not have any barriers but both terms similarly yield emotional outbreak from the group. As Marilyn Frye says, these barriers “are not accidental […] avoidable, but are systematically related to each other” (Frye 1983). The black culture’s barriers include segregation and stereotypes but are not controllable. For example, a black person that forgotten his or her keys in the car tries to find a way to get into the car but got arrested by the authorities for supposedly trying to break into someone’s car. The person in this situation most likely have been stereotyped or discriminated. The person would not be pleased and think the officers are racist but in reality, the stereotypes are affecting their perception of blacks. According to Robert Cherry, “negative stereotypes” are “attributes” of blacks (1128). The stereotypes are only negative because they are based on the “negative” obvious traits in the black culture. This is important to know because this concern is not only for blacks but for many other people out there a victim of stereotypes. In

Open Document