The Definition Of Identity In The Danger Of A Single Story?

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“Nothing of me is original. I am the combined effort of everyone I've ever known.” ― Chuck Palahniuk, Invisible Monsters. This quote is a good explanation of identity. Your identity is who you are. What you look like, what you wear, even what music you listen to. It’s what makes you unique. Your identity is something that forms through your actions and experiences. A person’s identity is generally defined and shaped by their experiences. The things in life that we go through define who we are, our views on things, our opinions, our morals and many other things. Our identity is also shaped by others. We’re influenced by society’s opinions, our friends, family and people we look up to. When you look up the definition of identity, it says …show more content…

We gain opinions and beliefs from others as well. In “The Danger of a Single Story” by Chimamanda Adichie, she explains exactly that, the danger of a single story. The danger of a single story is when you assume things about a certain type of people or thing based on one story you’ve heard or one experience you’ve had. It’s having a uniformed opinion and assuming someone else’s identity. She talked about a personal experience she had with this and said, “Because all I had read were books in which characters were foreign, I had become convinced that books by their very nature had to have foreigners in them and had to be about things with which I could not personally identify.” (Adichie) An example of this in Grendel, is the first interactions between Grendel and the humans. They both are intrigued by one another, and assume things immediately after seeing one another. When the humans see Grendel, they say “I don’t know. Could be it’s some kind of oak tree spirit. Better not to mess with it,” (Gardner 25) and they think he’s some type of fungus. They don’t know anything about him, only what he looks like, and when he attempts to communicate with them, they attack him. From then on, Grendel attacks humans and humans resent him because of one experience they had. That formed their identity by shaping who they are, and their opinions towards one another. It made Grendel into a monster, an identity he …show more content…

He moves beyond what society thinks of him and views the world how he truly sees it. (Stromme) At the end, Grendel turns into an empiricist while being beat by Beowulf. Beowulf forces Grendel to accept that all knowledge comes out of contact with reality and has his head smashed against the wall until he rejects everything except empiricism. (Stromme) Some may argue that Grendel had a given identity, as the dragon could see into the future, thus making the future unchangeable. That would make Grendel an essentialist, having a given identity. That’s not entirely correct as his fate might have been decided, his identity was not. The future can’t change the way he thinks, or what he does in the present, and those both make up your identity. The experiences he has does change how he thinks and the actions he takes. Your identity is shaped by your experiences, as it changes how you think and your actions, both major parts of your identity. You change your identity based on events, even single experiences or even off things you’ve heard. Your identity is also affected by others, and is not set in stone as it can change over time. Every time you wake up, have a thought or talk to someone, your identity could be

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