Identity In Today's Society

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Within the past ten years the sense of identity and uniqueness has become very important to people around the world. Home DNA tests have been put on the market so people can know their heritage and where their ancestors are from. Identity is one of the most important details about a person, yet many people do not know the basic building blocks of identity. There are thousands upon thousands of forms of identity, some of them are very common in every human from continent to continent, but there are a handful that differ. The most important and vividly interchangeable types of identity are cultural, gender, and religious.
Cultural identity is embraced through traditions, rituals, and history lessons that have been passed down through the years. …show more content…

Uncertainty and changeability has become more and more acceptable in many cultures. Not only has the public eye changed on how transgender individuals are viewed but the government has too. “THANKS to Caitlyn Jenner, and the military’s changing policies, transgender people are gaining acceptance — and living in a bigger, more understanding spotlight than at any previous time” (Friedman). Individuals are beginning to identify with genders other than their own, based on the internal and external factors of society, though usually “a person generally has a key sense of this identity from early childhood” (Lind). Today’s society blurs the line between male and female, and to the corresponding sexuality. Many people are not able to identify to either established genders, these actions play a huge role in the identity of an individual and can even cause what is known as an identity crisis. Heredity, environment, and genes are thought to play a large role in the recognition of one's gender identity but do not inevitably determine it. Gender identity is very important to the overall characteristics and identity of an individual because it helps define who they are physically. Sexual identity falls shortly after gender identity due to the close relationship between the two. Just because one identifies as a woman does not mean she is heterosexual and vice versa for someone who identifies as a man. Shockingly, “sexual differentiation of the brain happens during the second half of pregnancy, later than sexual differentiation of the genitals and body, which begins during the first two months of pregnancy. And since these two processes can be influenced independently of each other, it may be possible to have a mismatch between gender-specific brain development and that of the body,” thus proving that certain sexualities do not correspond with certain genders (Friedman). With the fluidity of gender roles in the modern world,

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