Cultural Sensitivity Language Based Amoja Three Rivers' Essay

¶ … Cultural Sensitivity Language Based Amoja Three Rivers' "Cultural Etiquette," Lynette Clemetson's "The Racial Politics Speaking Well," observations experience, write a draft essay dealing issues cultural sensitivity language. Prejudices and the politics of 'speaking well'

"Ethnocentrism," as defined in Amoja Three Rivers' essay "Cultural Etiquette" is "a tendency to view alien groups or cultures in terms of one's own" and "the belief in the inherent superiority of one's own group and culture, accompanied by a feeling of contempt for other groups and cultures." Because how we speak feels so natural to us, there is a tendency to assume that people who cannot speak our language must be less intelligent -- or people who look differently from us cannot be masters of English. This is a common form of linguistic ethnocentrism. We assume that a recent immigrant is not intelligent because he or she is just learning the language -- even though we cannot speak a second language ourselves. We assume that someone who is a third-generation...

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Assumptions about speech still are rooted in subconscious prejudice. Regarding the fact that President Barack Obama is often described as 'speaking well,' Clemetson dryly notes: "It would be more incredible…if Mr. Obama were inarticulate." Implied in this amazement is that people such as Barack Obama and Condoleezza Rice are exceptions, and…

Sources Used in Documents:

References

Clemetson, Lynette. (2007). On the politics of speaking well. The New York Times.

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/02/04/weekinreview/04clemetson.html?_r=0

Rivers, Amoja Three. (1996). Cultural etiquette. Communities. Retrieved:

http://communities.ic.org/articles/1024/Cultural_Etiquette


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