#164, Ethnicity

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The past two weeks in class, you read stories that revolved around characters who struggled understanding their identity. In Skins, Mitchell Sabattis is half Native American and half Swedish. He struggles to be a "real" Indian and dealing with his split identity. In Nicole, the narrator has a white mother and a black father which makes her feel as though she is a black sheep in society. Both characters have to ask themselves, how do my race and ethnicity affect who I am?

ethnicity n. the fact or state of belonging to a social group that has a common national or cultural tradition

South Korea is a homogenous nation with ethnic Koreans comprising 96.7% of the population. As the vast majority of the populace is Korean, ethnicity is less of a concern here than most other parts of the world. This still leaves the very difficult question—what is a “real” Korean? What does a real Korean believe in? What do they value? How do they behave? What do they look like? How do they dress? And in your mind, how closely do you match this imagined person?

I’ll tally your collective Korean-ness as the responses roll in.

2020 Cohort Korean-ness

March 23 // 50 data points

To complete this Journal response, address the following:

  1. How much of a “real” Korean do you think of yourself? Why?

  2. Comment on a peer's response.

-Brenden Lee Teacher