Race and Ethnicity. Local Ethnic Regions

Similar documents
Unit II Migration. Unit II Population and Migration 21

Lesson Plan: Immigration in America

MIGRATION. Chapter 3 Key Issue 2. Textbook: p Vocabulary: #31-34

HUMAN GEOGRAPHY. By Brett Lucas

Chapter 3: Migration. The Cultural Landscape: An Introduction to Human Geography

Selected National Demographic Trends

Cities and product variety: evidence from restaurants

Section 1: The New Immigrants

EXAM INFORMATION. Human Geography II of the United States and Canada. European Exploration. Europe in North America. Age of Discovery 2/28/2013

Chapter 3 Notes Earth s Human and Cultural Geography

Students majoring in International Relations are required to take ONE course from each of the following fields:

The Popula(on of New York City Recent PaFerns and Trends

Contents. Complete List of Contents... ix Publisher s Note... xiii Contributors...xvii

Migration. Chapter 3

AP Human Geography Pacing Guide

Immigration and Discrimination. Effects of the Industrial Revolution

Studying Populations II

CREATING THE U.S. RACIAL ORDER DYNAMIC 3: IMMIGRATION

Immigrants and Urbanization: Immigration. Chapter 15, Section 1

Assessment: The Great Wave of Immigration

Historic Migration Customized Project

Racial integration between black and white people is at highest level for a century, new U.S. census reveals

Terms and People new immigrant steerage Ellis Island Angel Island

A Flood of Immigrants

Identify the reasons immigration to the United States increased in the late 1800s.

Jet-lag between London and Los Angeles: as if we did not sleep throughout the night

Migration PPT by Abe Goldman

Hoboken Public Schools. Culinary Arts II Curriculum

Cuban Refugees Summary/Outline

In this activity, you will use thematic maps, as well as your mental maps, to expand your knowledge of your hometown as a specific place on Earth.

Principles of Cultural Geography

MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question.

MIGRATION. Chapter 3

Chapter 3: Migration. General Characteristics Ravenstein s Laws Zelinsky s Migration Transition

Name. 2. How do people act when they meet a new person and are able to communicate with them?

AMERICA MOVES TO THE CITY. Chapter 25 AP US History

Migration. What is Migration? Movement. Chapter 3. Key Question: Cyclic Movement movement away from home for a short period.

Long Distance Migration The Americas

Study Area Maps. Profile Tables. W Broadway & Cambie St, Vancouver, BC Pitney Bowes 2016 Estimates and Projections. W Broadway & Cambie St

PLEASE DO NOT WRITE ON THIS EXAM BOOKLET

Cultural Background of Rackleyland

APPENDIX B: U.S. HISTORY CONTENT ASSESSED BY U.S. HISTORY END OF COURSE ASSESSMENT

Topic Page: Immigration in the United States

CHAPTER SEVEN Sub-Saharan Africa

Immigration Investigation

Heritage and Ancestry

IMMIGRATION AND URBANIZATION

IMMIGRATION & URBANIZATION

Cultural Identity of Migrants in USA and Canada

Philadelphia was not a major destination for immigrants, but at the end of the twentieth century the

MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question.

Table of Contents How to Use This Product... 3 Introduction to Primary Sources... 5 Using Primary Sources... 15

the Philadelphia region became more diverse and cosmopolitan as it was energized by immigrants

Heritage Language Research: Lessons Learned and New Directions

IMMIGRATION AND URBANIZATION

Migration as a Crosscutting Theme in Human Geography

AP Human Geography Unit 2b: Migration Guided Reading/Study Guide Mr. Stepek Rubenstein p (Introduction/Why Do People Migrate?

Geographers generally divide the reasons for migration into push and pull factors.

International Studies Concentration Areas Approved Course Listing

International Studies Major Planning Sheet

Lecture 17. What they Bring: Social Capital. Ethnic Enterprise in American Cities. Rotating Credit Associations

North Carolina Essential Standards for Social Studies Grade 7

Culture. ATTN: Curriculum International. ANTH 120 and Upper Division. Upper Division Standing (3) Labor (3) GE Foundations. Cinema (3) History in the

KEY TERMS, PEOPLE, AND PLACES

2011 National Household Survey Profile on the Town of Richmond Hill: 1st Release

FORCED FROM HOME. Doctors Without Borders Presents AN INTERACTIVE EXHIBITION ABOUT THE REALITIES OF THE GLOBAL REFUGEE CRISIS

Chapter 3. Migration

Directives Period Topics Topic breakdowns

myworld Geography 2011

Ellis Island - The island of hope and tears Some were sent back home

An interactive exhibition designed to expose the realities of the global refugee crisis

Immigration and Urbanization 1. When did the U.S. experience a large wave of immigration?

BRIDGING THE GAP WITH VOLUNTEERS: EU AID VOLUNTEERS IN LRRD MISSIONS

United States Migration Patterns (International and Internal)

Migration Review CH. 3

Test Examples. Vertical Integration

EXAM INFORMATION. Human Geography II of the United States and Canada. L Anse aux Meadows World Heritage Site, NFD. Early European Exploration

Creating Effective Messaging for Hispanic Families

Chapter Inquiry- How did the massive immigration to Canada near the turn of the century affect the complex identity of our country?

2. In what stage of the demographic transition model are most LDC? a. First b. Second c. Third d. Fourth e. Fifth

Chapter 4: Migration. People on the Move

Chapter 3: Migration

TABLE OF CONTENTS. Describe and analyze the foundations of Asian political and

Thematic Units CELEBRATING. A Study Guide for CULTURAL DIVERSITY. Michael Golden. LEARNING LINKS P.O. Box 326 Cranbury, NJ 08512

Engaging the Social Capital of Immigrants to Create Sustainable Communities

When the Roman Empire divided, Greece and the rest of the eastern half was called the what?

Refugees: A National and Historical Perspective

United States History: 1865 to Present SOL USII. 2 : The student will use maps, globes, photographs, pictures, or tables for explaining:

Photo: Breckenridge, CO

1. ON THE FRONTIER 2. THE SECOND INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION. Tutorial Outline

Boston s Emerging Ethnic Quilt: A Geographic Perspective. James P. Allen and Eugene Turner. California State University, Northridge.

Module 3.2: Movement (ch. 3) 2. Which of the following items would have a low transferability rate? a. Lead b. Sand c. Computers d. Cars e.

myworld Geography Eastern Hemisphere 2011

An Introduction to Human Geography The Cultural Landscape, 8e James M. Rubenstein. Migration. PPT by Abe Goldman modified DKroegel

IMMIGRATION. Read-Aloud Plays. by Sarah Glasscock. New York Toronto London Auckland Sydney Mexico City New Delhi Hong Kong

Platon School Model United Nations th 8th March 2015

Model United Nations College of Charleston November 3-4, Humanitarian Committee: Refugee crisis General Assembly of the United Nations

Immigration: The Great Push/Pull. Terms to consider. Period of Immigration (cont.) Diversity Discrimination Racism Melting Pot (?

NEW YORK STATE CORE CURRICULUM, SOCIAL STUDIES Grade 5: The United States, Canada, and Latin America

HMDA Race and Ethnicity Reporting Appendix B - Revised as of August 24, 2017

Transcription:

Exercise 3 Due Thursday Oct. 26 Complexity of Cultural Areas Cultural Interaction. Throughout history (including the present), there have been contact between and also clashes within cultural groups. (a) Select any two of the time periods from the list. (b) Discuss geographically in appropriate detail one major cultural interaction that occurred. (Diffusion and adaptation may be linked to the theme.) (c) Include local evidence of original culture groups, presence and influence of the outside groups that occupied the area in the past, and any present-day characteristics that support the arrival of new cultural influences. (d) Include appropriate maps and illustrations. (e) Include a bibliography. GEOG 247 Cultural Geography The Geographies of Race and Ethnicity Part 2 Prof. Anthony Grande Hunter College CUNY AFG 2017 Lecture design, content and presentation AFG 1017. Individual images and illustrations may be subject to prior copyright. 1 Studying Ethnicity Geographically Ethnic geography is the study of the spatial aspects of ethnicity. Cultural geographers: Identify ethnic regions Look into ethnic diffusion and interaction Delve into the relationship between people and their environment (ecology) and Differentiate ethnic landscapes. Local Ethnic Regions Ethnic Neighborhood A voluntary urban community where people of like-origin reside by choice. Ghetto An area of a city where an ethnic group lives either by choice, lack of a better opportunity, or mandate. Ethnoburb An area outside of a city (suburban ethnic neighborhood) that becomes home to an immigrant population; usually wealthier immigrants. Note the connotation difference between the ghetto definition and the other two. 3 Different groups are clustered in different areas of the city. Why? Chicago s Ethnic Neighborhoods Present-day ethnic urban region with an ethnic landscape. Los Angeles Chinatown What accounts for the different shapes of the ethnic neighborhoods? Why are some areas penetrated or split by another group? Do neighborhoods change over time? 5 6 1

Alhambra, CA (W of Los Angeles) Ethnoburb Jewish Venetian Ghetto 16 th Century Note the word nuovo on the map, an indication of ghetto expansion. 7 8 Cultural Diffusion and Ethnicity Cultural Diffusion and Ethnicity Migration: the large scale movement of people between different regions. Most migration of ethnic groups falls under the definition of relocation migration. Leads to cultural interaction. Chain Migration The tendency of people to migrate over a period of time from specific source areas to specific destinations. (Dominicans and Upper Manhattan) Involuntary (forced) Migration The forced displacement of a population, whether by government policy, warfare, or other violence, ethnic cleansing, disease, natural disaster or enslavement. (Darfur region of the Sudan; fleeing warfare in Syria; New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina) 9 Ethnic Cleansing The removal of an unwanted minority population from a nation-state through harassment, mass killing, deportation, or imprisonment. (Jews in Nazi Germany; Rwandan genocide; Rohingya crisis in Myanmar) Return Migration Ethnic diffusion that involves the voluntary movement of a group of migrants back to its ancestral or native country or homeland. (African-American return to areas in the South) 10 Pattern of African- American Migration in the U.S. Now there is a return migration to the South. Cultural Diffusion and Ethnicity Cultural simplification The process by which immigrant ethnic groups lose aspects of their traditional culture in the process of settling in a different area, creating a new culture that is less complex than the old. But languages and dialects, traditional food flavorings, and modernized religious services offer good examples of the preservation of the archaic. 11 12 2

Ethnic Ecology Caucasus Ethnic Ecology Cultural Pre-adaptation The adaptive traits and skills possessed by a group in advance of migration, giving the group survival ability and competitive advantage in occupying the new environment. Scandinavians in Wisconsin Cubans in South Florida Cultural Mal-adaptation Poor or inadequate adaptation that occurs when a group pursues an adaptive strategy that fails to provide the necessities of life or destroys the environment that nourishes it. Tried to plant homeland crops in new environment (Bantu in southern Africa) Used improper techniques (British in tropical Africa) Diversity within a small area because of rugged physical geography (isolated regions). Remember the languages map of this region! 13 14 Cultural Ecology: Hillside Farming in Asia People developed techniques to deal with water and steep slopes. Ethnic Cultural Interaction Ethnicity interacts with: Religion: religion tenets and belief systems will influence how people will relate to others Health: attributes affecting health as diet, seeking medical attention, vaccinations, smoking, personal hygiene, body mutilations, etc. vary with culture Business activity: how business is done; the way items are bought and sold: post prices/barter for best deal 15 16 Ethnic Cultural Interaction Ethnicity interacts with Immigrant groups bring their types of employment: trades to a new location and Transference: certain groups engage in skill-based have excelled in employment activities (brick layers/house /labor niches; can be ecology-related or a history of painters/gardeners, etc.). Stereotypes may then working with a skill set. develop: Korean grocers, Opposite occurs when groups Chinese launderers, Italian whose skill sets cannot be cooks, Kenyan long-distance utilized in new location are runners, Irish police officers, employed in low wage and Jewish merchants, Dominican menial jobs (licensed professionals, farmers, teachers). can construction workers, baseball players, Native Ameri- German brewers. Religion and Neighborhood Businesses Influence of Dutch Reformed Church prevents stores from opening on Sundays even if permitted by law. 17 18 3

Ethnic Landscapes Ethnic flag: A readily visible marker of ethnicity on the landscape. http://www1.cuny.edu/portal_ur/content /nationofimmigrants/gallery.php 19 Ethnic Landscapes: Cuisine Culinary Landscape: Tell me what you eat and I ll tell you who you are. Food is a sensitive indicator of identity. Spices of India CUISINE: style or method of cooking, esp. as characteristic of a particular country, region, or establishment. Characterized by distinctive ingredients, techniques, traditions and dishes (combinations and presentation) usually associated with a specific culture or geographic region. Hearth cuisine was influenced by availability of local ingredients and traditions. Religious food laws (e.g., Hindu/Islamic/Jewish) can have a strong influence on the dishes and their preparation. Food presentation and eating methods (including utensils, bread-products, hands) are part of this. 20 Ethnic Landscapes: Cuisine Cuisine can be an indication of a dominant group or the local influence of tasty food provided by an enterprising person. http://blogs.voanews.com/all-about-america/2015/05/18/top-10- most-popular-ethnic-cuisines-in-us/ http://www.herinterest.com/types-of-cuisine/ : top 20 presentation What s the next big thing in ethnic food? Moroccan, Korean, Southeast Asian, Cuban, Vietnamese, and Peruvian foods are growing in popularity. Popular TOP 10 Chinese Mexican TOP 20 Italian Mexican Japanese Italian Greek Indian French Cajun Thai Soul/BBQ Spanish Thai Indian Greek Mediterranean Chinese Lebanese Japanese American Moroccan Mediterranean French Spanish German Korean Vietnamese Turkish Caribbean Food Associations http://www.food-links.com/ 21 https://www.google.com/search?q=insect+recipes+with+pictures&source=lnms&tbm=isch&sa =X&ved=0ahUKEwjv4qDru4LXAhVH0YMKHfLADRcQ_AUICigB&biw=1470&bih=708#imgrc=_ 22 Preferred Food Types by State The map below does not show the most popular cuisine in each state, but rather which food outperforms others in the state as compared to the national average. Ethnic Landscapes: Where is it? How can you tell? http://www.businessinsider.com/the-best-thing-to-eat-in-every-us-state-2015-10/#colorado-feast-on-some-light-crispy-and-protein-rich-rocky-mountainoysters-also-known-as-prairie-oysters--aka-fried-bull-calf-testicles-6 23 24 4

Ethnic Landscapes: Engineering Great Engineers or Alien Culture? How else! 25 26 Urban Ethnic Landscapes: Greek Area in Astoria, Queens What are the hints? Who Lives Here? Terry G. Jordan-Bychkov 27 28 Urban Ethnic Landscapes: San Diego Mural Religious Ethnic Landscape Symbols Terry G. Jordan-Bychkov 29 30 5

NEXT: 31 6