The Complexity Of Identity

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At many points in life one may ask themselves, who am I, how do I see myself versus how do others see me? The question is very complex today as it was in the Old World Diaspora such as in the Indian Ocean, Egypt and Nubia. Identity is a very wide and broad concept influenced and based on seven factors that constantly evolve and change over time. The seven factors are race/ethnicity, gender, religion, socio economic status, sexual orientation, age, and physical/mental ability. Within these seven are gender and sexuality and they are some of the main contributors that forms one’s identity. The formation of identify starts from birth and has influences from the seven factors as well as life experiences. Gender as well as sexuality are sole indicators …show more content…

Beverly Daniel Tatum in her writing from The Complexity of Identity: Who Am I?, “the concept of identity is a complex one, shaped by individual characteristics, family dynamics, historical factors and social and political contexts”. In this writing it talks about how someone could see their self in so many ways, it depends on how deeply or broadly the person would like to go to determine who they really are. The first way someone is mostly identified is by gender. Gender role play a role in how someone is treated and how they are seen worthy to society. Stated by scholarly writer Omar H. Ali, in the Indian Ocean World Diaspora more women were taken to the Indian World than men, the ratio was two to one. Men were needed more for labor in agriculture whereas women were idolized for their use in concubines and working as domestic …show more content…

Gender and sexuality have evolved over time and have never been the same throughout all of time. Noted by collegiate author Steven Siedman in his writing of, Heterosexuality from Behavior to Identity, men are viewed as intellectual, rational, aggressive and goal oriented, whereas women are defined as emotional, nurturing, empathic and maternal. He also noted that this social arrangement began to be tore down by women starting to attend college and enter the workforce. Men began to be seen as having little to no power and becoming more feminine while women in contrast become for masculine. This compares to how African women back in slavery were seen as strong individuals based on what was subjected onto them by their oppression. Many women had the pressure of sexual advances by their master, dealing with the pressure of deciding whether to bring children into this enslavement or the troubles of slavery itself. Many women made the tough decisions to either make themselves sterile, having an abortion or committing

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