There is an importance in the black community of embracing Afrocentric Cultural Values and sharing to our younger generations and adolescents. I chose a scholarly article that utilize this factor in its hypothesis. From the Journal of Black Psychology, the article is titled Examining Afrocentric Cultural Values, ethnic Identity, and Substance Use Abstinence in Low-Income, Early Adolescent, African American Girls. This very extensive article was written or experimented by our fellow professors at the University of Austin: Delida Sanchez, Emma Hamilton, Dorie Gilbert, and Elizabeth Vandewater. Their study is about finding a possible link of cultural factors and substance use abstinence among low income African American girls.
Between our daily rituals, our religion, and styles of speech, we are extremely different than africa, but we also have some similarities. The united states is pretty much a whole different world compared to the igbo culture in africa. Im sure many people have wondered what it would be like to live in a different part of the world, and in this essay, you should get a better understanding in the similarities and differences between the igbo culture and the united states. In english class, we have read a book called Things fall apart by Chinua Achebe, and have learned some things about how the igbo culture was and how they ran society. Some of the things they did would be completely wrong to do here in america.
Winger by Andrew Smith is a realistic fiction story about a high school student facing new obstacles in his life and in my opinion, is a very good example of how to write proper characters for this genre of story. I believe the book's strongest feature is its characters for multiple reasons. One of these is how they are developed over time. At the beginning of the novel, most of the side characters seem flat and stereotypical, but once you start getting further into the story, the characters reveal more about themselves and their character. The more we learn about them, the more relatable they become.
There are two major types of marriages in the world, arranged and love marriages. An arranged marriage is when a partner for one of the individuals is chosen by their family, and no love is usually involved. A love marriage on the other hand is when two individuals choose to marry each other because of the love they share for each other. A successful marriage is when both individuals can love, care, trust, and are happy with each other even through the ups and downs. Even though arranged marriages have their pros such as lower suicide and teen pregnancy rates, love marriages are more successful than arranged marriages because the individuals actually love each other from the start, there is the freedom of choosing their own spouse, and there
The are many different cultures around the world that have many different beliefs and religions. The Igbos are a very unique culture with many different beliefs. As a sociologist I have been studying the Igbo tribe for 3 weeks. Many wives, male dominance, chiefs and elders, robes, and female wrestling are all examples of the Igbos uniqueness and that is just the start. The Igbo rites of passage has evolved a lot since the British invaded them.
The pre-colonial and postcolonial Igbo society has been observed to be male dominated. Men reign supreme in sociocultural affairs while the female figure has specific limited prescribed roles, a confirmation of absence of feministic ideologies. Motherhood, being submissive to the husband and generally domestic dutiesare some of the roles women are associated with. As the title of the novel by Buchi Emecheta Second Class Citizenimplies, the female figure has been treated as a lesser significant sexwithin the Igbo society considering that equalityamong women is limited by their fathers, husbands and the general patriarchy system. This is something Adah finds quite the same when she moves to England whereby with her African descent she continues to suffer womanhood struggles.
Over time arranged marriages have changed. It not looked at as an obligatory action that needs to take place, but it is seen as an event that occurs for the happiness of the individuals
In England there is a huge diversity, but they have themselves helped to create, they are the ones who have colonized many countries, which thus led to people from countries fleeing away. Now we live in a globalized world where anything can happen, including in this narrative, there are some who are forcibly married to each other, there is 25 years’ difference on one and his bride. This just shows we are different and the culture and tradition you have, care must be taken to bring somewhere else, since it can be perceived incorrectly, although it is not wrong
The Okonkwo last name was originated in the country of Nigeria. And at my young age, I have been informally dealt with the task to carry on the culture and legacy of being an Okonkwo. The name Okonkwo is strong to the Igbo culture, a primary group in Nigeria. Not only does it represent symbolic culture, it also represents who you are as a person.
Is masculinity so important that you destroy a piece of you to keep an image? In Igbo culture the answer is yes, masculinity trumps all moral things; if you don’t kill if you don’t disrespect, if you show emotions, you are considered an agbala--a woman, or a man with no title. If you are a member of Igbo you are in a culture that is run by men, a patriarchy. The men fight, are served, make children, and marry women. Okonkwo a member of Igbo culture, falls victim of masculinity over family, where he gets as many sons as he can and have multiple wives.
In comparison of the two cultures, men are allowed to marry more than one wife. In location 49 it says, “A barn full of yams and he had three wives.” In contrast it is morally wrong in the Somali culture to have a man who his wives live together. However in the Igbo culture it is fine to have a man who his wives live with each other. In location 128, it shows this.
Have you ever read a novel about African cultures and traditions from African point of view? The novel Things Fall Apart, a tragedy by Chinua Achebe, centers on one tragic hero in Igbo village of Umuofia in Nigeria and the effects of European arrival on his life and Igbo clan. Throughout the novel, Achebe introduces Igbo customs to the reader by creating several occurrences and how they react on them to claim that the Igbo is civilized before the Europeans arrive. The significant difference between Igbo and Western cultures is the way wisdom is passed on: Igbo oral traditions transmit values and knowledge orally by allegorical tales, while Western literary traditions educate people through generations by written texts, just like the novel itself.
Yet, the officer who rejected a faced off was subject to peers alienation that made the consent of the king little compassion which eventually forced him to hand in a resignation of commission. This means that the officer is convictable of disregard in appeal a clarification from the challenger. It is notable that the act of denying a confrontation is viewed as an allegedly cowardly behaviour among military officers regardless of their
“Things Fall Apart”, a novel written by Chinua Achebe about Africa through the character Okonkwo, a man who Achebe uses to illustrate the complexity Igbo culture, contrary to what the Europeans portrayed Africa as. One main focus of the book is to counter the single story, which is the idea that an area is represented by one story, similar to a stereotype. However, differing from a stereotype a single story often completely misrepresents something, and in this case Africa. Europeans had been the only ones writing about Africa, describing all the culture as problematic for being different, rather than looking at what African culture really is. Achebe was one of the first to write about African culture for westerners to read about, making Things Fall Apart a true innovation in writing.
The family plays a huge role in the wedding ceremony and as such, the bride and groom are described as part of their families coming together and accepting one another. Cultures that are high in institutional collectivism try and make decisions that is best for the group rather than the individual person (Lustig & Koester, 2013). Since the marriages are often arranged by the families, they make decisions that are in the best interest of the family. This is different from when an individual choices for themselves a spouse because they do so based on their own interest, not often taking into account the interest of their