Van Hoa My
Van Hoa My
Van Hoa My
United States
Group 4
Content
Introduction
Melting pot or Salad bowl
The Establishment of the dominant Culture
The Assimilation of Non-Protestant and Non
Western Europeans
The African- American experience
The Civil Rights Movement of the 1950s-1960s
An American Paradox
A Universal Nation
In the twenty-first
century, the United
States probably has a
greater diversity of racial,
ethnic, culture, and
religious groups than any
other nation on earth.
According to 2010 U.S Census Bureau, there are an estimated 306 million people
living in the US. Of this population, an estimated 77,1% are White, 12,9% are Black
or African American, 4,2 % are Asian, 1,5% are Native American and Alaska Native,
0.3% are Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander, 4% are some other race .
Since 1776 many groups have been assimilated, but many also
remain separate (some of these are bicultural American but with
distinct language/culture)
Many settlers arrived in the US before it was the US (especially
Hispanics) and want to maintain their traditions and language
(Spanish)
The Establishment
of the Dominant Culture
Dominant culture
Dominant culture
English
speaking
Western
European
Protestant
Middle class
Catholic or Jewish
poor
Although slavery was abolished, attitudes toward AfricanAmericans were slow to change, especially in the South.
- Not allowed to vote
- Segregated from whites (separate schools)
- inferior education
- Poverty cycle
- Racial prejudice
Affirmative action:
- Requires employers to actively seek black workers
- Requires universities to recruit black students
- Has improved blacks situation in the US Mayors
of major cities, Supreme court, politicians
An American Paradox
A Universal Nation
Dominant culture
displace other culture
Impedes language
Contracted ideologies
come into conflict what
can cause a bloody battle
A Mosaic
A picture made up of many
tiny pieces of different color
A Melting Pot
A Salad bowl
Exercises
salad bowl, universal nation, English-speaking, political bosses, black Muslim,
Protestant, middle-class, assimilation, affirmative action, western European
Bibliography
- American Ways Maryanne, Kearny Datesman,
JoAnn Crandall, Edward N .Keary
- http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vietnamese_American
- http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Filipino_A
mericans
- http://www.infoplease.com/us/statistics/uspopulation-by-race.html
- https://www.census.gov/newsroom/releases/archive
s/2010_census/cb11-cn125.html
- http://education.nationalgeographic.com/education/
activity/cultural-diversity-united-states/?ar_a=1