Thursday, December 13, 2012

Summary Blog


Different Culture:   
Throughout the semester I have been spending time and talking to people who come from towns that were smaller and less diverse than mine. Mostly I looked at towns that were rural, predominantly white, and had a population of less than 500 people. I learned so much about how they view themselves as well as others, as well as how they interact with people who are from more diverse towns or how they think they interact with people of different races. The towns that I observed, while demographically similar, had their own culture, and there own views on how they interact with each other as well as those in more diverse communities, I found that this difference depended on that towns location to bigger towns such as Kearney, Grand Island, Lincoln, or Omaha.
Culture Shock and Migrant-Host Relations:
            I choose to look at the movement of people from these smaller towns to a larger community such as the ones mentioned above. I wanted to see if anyone experience culture shock and to what extent they experienced it. Remember that according to Martin and Nakayama culture shock is a relatively short-term feeling of disorientation and discomfort due to the lack of familiar cues in the environment. I also interviewed people who had moved to larger more diverse communities in order to see if they went through migrant-host relations, such as assimilation, separation integration, or maybe even marginalization.
Field Observations:
            The first part of my field observations happened in Eustis Nebraska and the small surrounding lake community. Eustis is located south of my hometown of Lexington, so I figured it would be really interesting to see how this town and its people were different from those of Lexington. Before going to Eustis I familiarized myself with some basic information about the town. According to city-data.com, in 2010 Eustis had a population of 401, and clrsearch.com states that Eustis has a population that is 97-98% White, with the other 2-3% categorized as other. The first time that I visited this small town it seemed that being located so closely to Lexington did make a difference in how they interact with each other, and those from other communities. While I did observe that the people of Eustis did live a much slower pace of life. It seemed that if something didn’t get done today, that was okay because it could always be done tomorrow. On one occasion I did over hear a couple of older ladies downtown comment how they had wanted to get a sewing project done, but that they still had plenty of time to do it, even if they don’t get to it for another couple of days (Kelsey, Personal Observation, 10/20/12).
            I happen to know a few people who live in Eustis, and when I was home on the weekend of 10/20/12 I saw them at the Walmart in Lexington. I was curious if they would act the same in this environment as they do when they are in the little market in Eustis, to my surprise they seemed to be unfazed by the cultural differences, and acted just as they do their. While they were faced with more people of different ethnicities, mostly Hispanic, they still had their same slow paced demeanor and still talked and acted just as before (Kelsey, Personal Observation 10/20/12).
Interviews:
            The first young lady I talked to had experienced culture shock, as well as some migrant-host relations. Growing up Rebecca lived in a small rural community, where she said she enjoyed the slow pace of life. She recalls that her town was mostly white. She attended a country school where she was in a class of 7 and there were only 30 people in the whole school, including the teachers, and they were all white. She attended this school until she was a 5th grader. After 5th grade her family moved to larger community and she started at the public middle school. She recalls her first day of 6th grade, “I was in complete disbelief and shock”, “I was scared.” (Personal Communication, 10/5/12). She stated that not only was she shocked by how many people were in her class, she went from a class of 7 to a class of almost 300, she said that she was not scared because there were people of different races but that she was scared because she didn’t know how to communicate with them. “I had never been around anyone of a different race, or culture so I wasn’t sure how to talk to them, I was scared to say something that would offend or upset them.” (Personal Communication, 10/5/12).
            The other person I talked to had a similar experience as the first, the difference was that he had moved from a large diverse community to a small rural perdominently white community. My second interviewee had grown up in Omaha where he attended a large and diverse elementary school. “In the 2nd grade there was only two kids in my class, me and another girl.” “I never minded though cause I made friends with anyone who would play with me, they weren’t that different from me.” He recalls that when he moved to the smaller town he was shocked to enter his first day at his new school and there were no children of different races. “I remember asking my teacher if all the kids of different races were sick or if it was some holiday.” “I was so shocked by how differently those people acted, and I never did fit in because I never agreed with how they treated those were not like them.” (Personal communication, 10/18/12). He told me that he always felt separate from the people of his new town, and that he never fit in because he was unwilling to let go of how he grew up and the lessons he was taught by his other friends.

References:

Martin, J. N., & Nakayama, T. K. (2012). Intercultural Communication in Contexts.Chicago: McGraw Hill.

Internet Chat Interview. 05 2012.

Personal Interview, 10/18/12
Personal Observation, 10/20/12, Eustis Nebraska

Saturday, December 8, 2012

http://www.xtranormal.com/watch/14008891/cultural-reporter-video

This link will take you to the video that I created for this part of the cultural reporter project.