Conforming to Cultural Stereotypes

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Stereotypes have most likely been around since the dawn of time and will continue to be around for as long as people continue to make assumptions about other people based on their race, gender, religious views, or social class. Everyone has been pressured since infancy to convert to the stereotypes within their society. Perhaps this is not a negative reaction, seeing as majority of people convert to stereotypes and social norms without even a fighting word. Most children will believe their parents or guardians when told certain activities are bad or not for their gender, and will continue to follow these set rules to be a “good kid” and gain the approval of their guardians, which lead to the desire for them to gain the approval of society. The problem with conformity, as it is with most subjects, is when people take it too far. Conformity becomes a destructive aspect of one’s life when the norm of society is telling people to reconstruct their entire being, be that mentally and even physically.

Stereotypes, which are defined as “simplified description applied to every person in the same category” (Macionis 21), are seen in every aspect of our lives even culturally. Cultural stereotypes are “widely known beliefs that broadly influence how individuals are evaluated and treated” (Lun 117). Most stereotypes are enthused by bias from people of other social groups and will alter facts into a new reality (Macionis 21). According to "Cultural Stereotypes And The Self: A Closer Examination Of Implicit Self-Stereotyping" people tend to unconsciously integrate stereotypes about themselves into their self-concept, though this is usually only positive stereotypes and not the negative ones (117). This is referred to as self-stereotyping, wh...

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