Cultural Space

 

            While reading for a class to obtain my bachelor's degree I came across a chapter discussing cultural space. I never thought much about the space that I inhabit and how it changes. Cultural Space, according to Martin and Nakayama, is the particular configuration of the communication that constructs meanings of various places (Martin & Nakayama, 2022). One of these spaces is the home in which we grow up in. The home usually stands as a safe, secure place for us to grow, mature, and learn. However, a home can be described in many different ways from a specific address to a particular state or nation. The importance of the home is that it has a particular tie to us as an individual and won’t have the exact same meaning for everyone. In looking at cultural space we also need to realize how it changes. There are several different ways a space can change. In thinking about those changes, it is important to consider postmodern cultural space. Postmodern cultural space are places that are defined by cultural practices – languages spoken, identities enacted, rituals performed – and that often change as new people move in and out of these spaces. In thinking about postmodern cultural space, I think about the ever-changing dynamics of the United States and how growing up I never came into contact with many individuals that were different than myself and now it is an everyday occurrence. I think of the different languages that are now spoken that I wasn’t exposed to on a daily basis and want to know more about them. Overall, the classes I am taking continue to challenge how I look at the world I live in.

 








 

References

Martin, J., & Nakayama, T. (2022). Intercultural Communication in Contexts. New York: McGraw Hill LLC.

 

 

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