browngirl: (Catch a Star (PaperVolcano))
browngirl ([personal profile] browngirl) wrote2007-05-23 09:31 am

A Few Discoveries and An Ethics Question



  • An MBTA flexible pass will still function after having been stuck in a washing machine for a week.
  • This cold makes me sound rather like The Littlest Jagermonster.
  • Balsamic vinegar is sadly wasted on a person with no sense of smell.
  • OTOH, changing diapers is not nearly as onerous.
  • [livejournal.com profile] tibicina is a great houseguest -- well, we already knew that. *grin*




So, I hear people muse about cultural appropriation, about people taking elements of other cultures than those they 'belong' to, and using them without really understanding them or otherwise misusing them.

Now, I generally believe that culture is learned, not genetic, so people who honestly are interested in a culture are entirely capable of learning it. (Hence my use of Scare Quotes around 'belonging' above.) For example, I roll my eyes at well-to-do children who affect the poses of hoodlums -- but that has to do with posturing, not with particular ethnicities.

That said, though...

I've been fascinated for years by the Scandinavian practice of honoring Saint Lucy the Lightbringer on the Winter Solstice (you knoe me and light imagery) so I decided to make her the theme of my Winter Holiday Card this year (thus making it a little more Christian than I really should for true ecumenicalism, but that;s *another* neurotic LJ post). And then I wondered if I was unfairly strip-mining a culture I don't actually belong to just for my own amusement, or if I was being inspired by an idea from another culture and translating it in a respectful way.

And that's about where I'm currently at. *muses*

[identity profile] tsjafo.livejournal.com 2007-05-23 05:31 pm (UTC)(link)
I'm American which means all my culture, such as it is, is taken from someone else. I'm also of mixed 'race' so I have no idea what types of behavior would be considered 'appropriate' by some other group. That said, I see nothing wrong in general with adopting a custom or practice from someone/somewhere else. I'm Christian but I see nothing wrong with wishing someone of a different belief a Happy Hanukkah/Kwanzaa/Solstice/Winterfair or whatever they celebrate, nor am I upset if someone says Happy Whatever to me.

I've been honored to received your holiday cards and magnets and I treasure them. I think the more respectful 'cultural mining' the better.

[identity profile] browngirl.livejournal.com 2007-05-27 12:11 pm (UTC)(link)
*blush* Thank you, Sgt. Jafo. *grins and hugs your knees*

PS Tell Jez I said hi!

[identity profile] tsjafo.livejournal.com 2007-05-28 06:04 pm (UTC)(link)
*hugs back* Jez says hi and hugs also.