Thursday, October 24, 2013

Catholic, Student, Human


Communion at the Newman Center

Newman Center Community Room
                In Intercultural Communication in Contexts, Martin and Nakayama defines personal identity as “the sum of all our identities,” or “who we think we are” (Martin & Nakayama, 2013, p. 205).  Obviously, a number of factors contribute to one’s personal identity, including gender, age, class, ethnicity, and religion.  In my focus on the student Catholic community at UNL, I will be looking into the contribution of religious identity to an overall personal identity. 
Newman Center Chapel
                As we go through our day to day routines, the various parts that make up our personal identities influence every choice we make.  We value these aspects of our identity, and we want to make sure that others acknowledge or at least recognize them.  To that end, as we interact with others, we reinforce our desired identity in a process that Martin and Nakayama call “Identity negotiation theory” (Martin & Nakayama, 2013, p. 174).  We can do this by wearing certain clothes, attending certain events, or even eating certain foods.  There is a back and forth of us trying to convey our own identity while receiving messages of others’ identities in every interaction.
                Religious identity can be interesting.  With the exception of some religions, we can’t automatically tell somebody’s religious identity by looking at them.  Sometimes, “everyday actions may not invoke religious identity” (Martin & Nakayama, 2013, p. 199).  This means that, if we are to convey a religious identity, we may need to be more conscious of it as we go about the routine.  It is my goal to examine this identity negotiation among student Catholics, whose faith is often not outwardly obvious.  I will accomplish this in two phases:  I will observe and learn about the Catholic faith itself, and then I will collect data through interviews about how people use their identity as a Catholic in their interactions when not at mass—when their religious identity is coming into contact with a multitude of challenges and indifference alike.
                My own religious identity is certainly not something that I wear on my sleeve.  I enact this identity more through action and personal reflection.  With religion being such a hot subject in many discussions (especially among passionate college students), negotiating that part of my identity poses a unique struggle with the day to day.  This is what motivates me to look at student Catholics; as a Baptist, my belief system is different on some key points, and I’m interested in finding out how that affects a person’s identity.
                I will be interviewing three people in the course of my studies:  one who identifies as Catholic but is not heavily involved with the student organization HuskerCatholic, one who is heavily involved with HuskerCatholic, and someone in a position of leadership at HuskerCatholic.  Having a student organization readily available can make a world of difference in negotiating one’s religious (or any) identity, and I’m hoping that my data will shed some light on whether having a community of like-minded individuals is beneficial.  I would like to answer the following question:  we openly negotiate our identities as student just by walking across campus, but how do we negotiate our religious identities at the same time?


References


Martin, J.N., & Nakayama, T.K. (2013). Intercultural communication in contexts (6th ed.). Boston, MA: McGraw Hill. 


Resources

HuskerCatholic Web Site:  http://www.huskercatholic.org/

Identity Negotiation Wikipedia:  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Identity_negotiation


Thursday, September 26, 2013

Cultural Reporter Introduction Blog

Culture has many definitions, which can be generalized to "Learned patterns of behavior and attitudes shared by a group of people" (Martin & Nakayama, 2013, p. 88).  In the social science perspective, culture is a set of patterns of perceptions that we have to learn.  In the interpretive approach, culture includes contextual symbolic meanings-a behavior or attitude is only truly cultural if it holds symbolic meaning to those who practice it.  In the critical perspective, culture can be a source of contested meanings.
Catholic baptisms, for example, are very different
from Baptist baptisms.
While analyzing my own various cultural identities, I kept thinking of my identity as a Baptist and how rare it is to find another Baptist as I move around UNL.  With the above definitions of culture in mind, I have chosen Catholic UNL students as my cultural group of study.  The Catholic belief system is almost directly opposite my own belief system, despite both being denominations of Christianity—that alone fits it into the critical definition of culture, as the beliefs between religious definitions have historically caused a lot of tension.  In the interpretive approach, Catholic students form a culture of people who place significant meaning on several rituals, such as attending mass or praying before a meal.  Finally, Catholic students (and Catholics in general) have to learn the belief system from others in order to understand and claim “Catholic” as a cultural identity.

In order to study this cultural group, I plan to approach the HuskerCatholic group that headquarters out of the Newman Center St. Thomas Aquinas Church on campus.  I will attend mass at St. Thomas in order to witness some important Catholic rituals in practice by the group.  If possible, I may attend a community event hosted by HuskerCatholic.  I also intend to interview student Catholics in order to get a one-on-one perspective of how individuals practice this cultural identity.  My goal is to learn more about Catholicism in an effort to expand my understanding of my own religious identity.  I am largely uneducated about the finer details of Catholicism, and I think learning more will prove to be a benefit to me in the long run.






Works Cited

Martin, J.N., & Nakayama, T.K. (2013). Intercultural communication in contexts (6th ed.) New York, NY: McGraw Hill. 

Newman Center. HuskerCatholic, n.d. Web. 26 Sept. 2013.

A Catholic Baptism [Photograph].  Retrieved September 26, 2013, from:
http://education-portal.com/academy/lesson/the-7-catholic-sacraments-definition-history-quiz.html

Thursday, September 12, 2013


Hello, everyone.  This is the raw video for my first cultural reporter assignment.  I had a lot of trouble with Windows Movie Maker--It simply refused to save the video I had made with the images and transitions and stuff.  Does anybody know how to fix that problem?

Since they can't be in the video, here are some of the pictures I was going to include:








 Sorry that I couldn't get the video up as I had planned.  I'll try to figure something out for next time.
~Nina

Greetings.

My name is Nina Jamesine Pickrel and this is my Cultural Reporter blog.  Throughout this semester, I will be posting blogs pertaining to the Cultural Reporter assignment for Comm 211x instructed by Sara Baker.

-Nina