We are constantly being
asked who we are…then you have to stop and think about what that question even
means; what you like to do, who do you want to be, what do you value, or how do
you describe yourself? Since the beginning of your life, you are supposed to
define yourself, usually with age coming first and then your individual
characteristics. All of these characteristics add up to be your own identity.
Identity is the concept of who we are, (Martin & Nakayama, 2013). Along
with identity comes the three perspectives including: social science,
interpretive, and critical.

The
article, Untold stories of a Revolution
by Julie Knaga reflected on the 2011 clashes between the pro- and
anti-government groups in Cairo. These protests became violent and deadly and
in turn President Mubarak stepped down from power after almost 30 years,
(Knaga, 2014). Photographer, Brian Driscoll, went back to Cairo recently to get
insight civilians who were captured and taken to military prison. Civillian,
Dr. R, who was kept in the military prison for 26 days shed some like on the
human right abuses. Driscoll was able to capture pictures of ones who were
detained and used those to tell his story of experience (pictured right). Pictured
in the scarf, Mohana, 23, was an assistant medic at hospitals during street
protests and pictured below is Shireen, 25, an accountant, who was seized in
Tahrir Square by SCAF, (Knaga, 2014). Driscoll did make mention that people
were so afraid to get caught of him taking their pictures because of what would
happen to them again, Driscoll described the experience as “intense”. Within this
problem there are two distinct identity groups, the pro- and anti-government
but within those lie so many more reasons of why a person has chosen to be for
or against their government. From the outside we are just assessing ascription,
process by which we are attributing identities to others, (Martin &
Nakayma, 2013).
Not only from the chapter
readings and this article, but the other posts of this identity problem that is
so prevalent has made me reconsider how I view people. A lot of times they do not have the chance to
tell me their identity and explain why they hold the views that they do, I just
put together the typical stereotype of what someone looks like and go with
that. I believe that everyone at some point or another is guilty for
attributing characteristics to others that are false.
References
Knaga,
J. (2014, January 25). Untold stories of a revolution. Retrieved from
cnnphotos.blogs.cnn.com
Martin, J.N., & Nakayama, T.K. (2013). Intercultural Communication
in Contexts (6th ed.). New York, NY: McGraw Hill.
Hi Rylee!
ReplyDeleteYour introduction really grasped my attention. The questions you posed made me stop and think about who I want to be and how I will describe my identity in my first video. The pictures you tied into your post were great and you did a good job of describing their significance. In your last paragraph you mention how you attribute stereotypes to peoples identities. I believe we are all guilty of that and it is something people should strive to overcome. Overall, you did a great job!
This was a very good post. All of it got me to think about what people go through. I got to thinking situations I may have or could stereotype people. This post was impressive from start to finish. Good piece of work.
ReplyDeleteWow! I love the inclusion of the photographs. Very powerful. Great blog!
ReplyDelete