When new immigrants migrate to a neighborhood and "conquer" the area of the old race or culture that was there
Back
How are power relationships showed on the cultural landscape?
Front
Signs with racial restrictions, murals, etc.
Back
How do the Mexicans rely on the Chinatown in Mexicali?
Front
Keeps the city economically stable
Back
How are races divided?
Front
1. Categories by government
2. Residential Segregation
3. Racialized Occupations
Back
What are the four main categories of identity?
Front
1. Race
2. Sexuality
3. Ethnicity
4. Gender
Back
What are social relations?
Front
assumptions of groups and what they should do or shouldn't do socially, economically, politically, or domestically
Back
THESE SETS ARE GENERALLY NOT REVISED SO GRAMMAR/SPELLING MISTAKES MAY BE CONSTANT AND NOT ALL INFORMATION IS GUARANTEED 100% ACCURATE
Front
Back
Why do we study identity?
Front
1. To find how people and society construct identities
2. To see how place factors into identity
3. To see how geography shows power relationships between people
Back
What is an imposed identity?
Front
An identity that is placed on you by academics, politics, social cultures, etc.
Back
What is an ethnicity?
Front
the idea of people being closely bounded and related in a place. Usually a small and strong culturally linked
Back
What are power relationships?
Front
assumptions about who has power and who controls others
Back
How do we construct our identities?
Front
experiences, emotions, connections, rejections, etc.
Back
What is the major difference between race and ethnicity?
Front
Race is assigned and heritable, while ethnicity is chosen through ancestral history
Back
How are ethnicities developed?
Front
Through ancestors
Back
What is a good example of succession?
Front
Hispanics in NYC
Back
Why are women chosen to work over men?
Front
1. More reliable
2. Less likely to conduct strikes or fight for rights
3. More meticulous
4. More freedom from family responsibilities
Back
What is the canton level?
Front
a small geographical area where cultures define themselves apart from the state
Back
What are "social boxes"?
Front
Ideas that are created by society for what a certain race, ethnicity, or sexuality is expected to do, and what we assume about them
Back
What is racism?
Front
Declaring a group superior over another, usually due to skin color
Back
What pushes the continuation of racism?
Front
1. Politics
2. Cultural History
3. Power Relationships
Back
What does gendered mean?
Front
When something is meant to be for only men or only women
Back
How do the "succeeders" change the cultural landscape?
Front
Place own culture throughout neighborhood (signs, languages, religious places, foods, etc.)
Back
How do we reinforce race?
Front
Applications, censuses, etc.
Back
What is the Gross National Income?
Front
worth of what's built and foreign investments (Total profit of a state)
Back
How are identities advertised?
Front
Through the market economy (cars, clothing, memberships, etc.)
Back
What is Elder, Knopp, and Nast's Queer Theory?
Front
The study of where homosexuals live and why, while placing negative connotations on words and ideas that oppose heteronormative
Back
What is an assigned identity?
Front
An identity that you choose from certain categories