1 / 8

Critical Approach:

Critical Approach:. Review of : Family and Neighborhood Contexts Religious and Educational Contexts Historical and Political Contexts. Contextual Influences On Interracial Relationships. Family and Neighborhood Contexts.

Download Presentation

Critical Approach:

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Critical Approach: • Review of : • Family and Neighborhood Contexts • Religious and Educational Contexts • Historical and Political Contexts Contextual Influences On Interracial Relationships

  2. Family and Neighborhood Contexts • Family can set a foundation for one’s cultural diversity and outlook on intercultural relationships. • Studies show a parent’s friendship network is closely related to a child’s likelihood of interethnic dating. • Neighborhoods influence who one makes friends with • People are more likely to form a bond with the types of individuals they see most. Family is the first place we learn to adapt to and receive communication.

  3. Religious and Educational Contexts • Institutions such as school and church have a profound effect on promoting or discouraging intercultural relationships. • Recent research suggests integrated institutions have the greatest opportunity to establish intercultural relationships. • Even more influential on interethnic dating are the friends one surrounds themselves with. The more ethnically varied ones friends are, the more likely he or she will have more intimate intercultural relationships.

  4. Historical and Political Contexts • Throughout history, military presence abroad has spawned intercultural relationships. Service men and women often return home married while stationed out of the country. • Many US servicemen challenged laws that prohibited intercultural/interracial marriages. • History hasn’t always seen such compassion towards interracial relationships. • Rulling Passions a book by Anton Gill addresses intercultural relationships or lack there of during the colonization of America. Gill talks about a wave of interracial children who were often unwanted and or abandoned in early America and the British policies related to these offspring. History, the military and a better understanding of intercultural relationships.

  5. Key Words Cognitive Consistency (390)- Having a logical connection between existing knowledge and a new stimulus. Compromise Style (409)- A style of interaction for an intercultural couple in which both partners give up some part of their own cultural habits and beliefs to minimize cross cultural differences. Consensus Style (409)- A style of interaction for an intercultural couple in which partners deal with cross-cultural differences by negotiating their relationship. Guanxi (393)- A chinese term for relational network. Intercultural Relationships (382)- Relationships that are formed between individuals from different cultures. Intimacy (395)- The extent of emotional closeness. Line of Sight (401)- Information about other people’s identity based upon visible physical characteristics.

  6. Key Words (Cont.) Obliteration Style (409)- A style of interaction for an intercultural couple in which both partners attempt to erase their individual cultures in dealing with cultural differences. Relation Learning (383)- Learning that comes from a particular relationship but generalizes to other contexts. Romantic Relationships (397)- Intimate relationships that comprise love, involvement, sharing, openness, connectedness, and so on. Self-Disclosure (399)- Revealing information about oneself. Similarity Principle (390)- A principle of relational attraction suggesting that individuals tend to be attracted to people they perceive to to be similar to themselves. Submission Style (409)- A style of interaction for an intercultural couple in which one partner yields to the other partner’s cultural patterns, abandoning or denying his or her own culture.

  7. Quiz

  8. Internet ResourcesRelated to Intercultural Relationships www.lovingday.org www.npr.org/templates/story.php?storyId=1018479 www.theactivist.com www.interfaithfamily.com/ix.php?tid=IF.RL.IR www.youtube.com/watch?v=6Z87iSjZeJ8

More Related