Ethnic Geography

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Ethnic Geography

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Title: Ethnic Geography


1
Ethnic Geography
  • The Human Mosaic
  • Chapter 9

2
Examples of ethnic enclaves in the United States
  • North Boston
  • Mounted statue of American hero Paul Revere is in
    an Italian neighborhood
  • Most businesses have Italian names
  • Women lean out of upper-story windows conversing
    Naples-style to neighbors across the street
  • Italian-dominated outdoor vegetable market
  • Pilgrimage to the site where the American
    Revolution began has become a trip to Little
    Italy

3
Examples of ethnic enclaves in the United States
  • Wilber, Nebraska, bills itself The Czech Capital
    of Nebraska
  • Holds an annual National Czech Festival
  • Authentic food, and locally made handicraft are
    offered for sale
  • Many shops are decorated in Czech motif and
    ethnic music is played on the streets
  • The festival draws thousands of visitors each
    year

4
Examples of ethnic enclaves in the United States
  • Other ethnic festivals held in Nebraska
  • Newman GroveNorwegian Days
  • Bridgeportthe Greek Festival
  • Dannebrogthe Danish Grundlovs Fest
  • McCookGerman Heritage Days
  • Stromsburgthe Swedish Festival ONealthe St.
    Patricks Day Celebration
  • Several Indian tribal powwows are held in other
    cities

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Examples of ethnic enclaves in the United States
  • An ethnic crazy-quilt pattern exists in both
    urban and rural areas of the United States
  • Same kind of pattern exists in Canada, Russia,
    China, and many other countries

7
Problems encountered when defining ethnic group
  • Controversy has surround attempts to formulate an
    accepted definition
  • Word ethnic derived from Greek word ethnos
    meaning people or nation
  • For this text defined as people of common
    ancestry and cultural tradition, living as a
    minority in a larger society, or host culture
  • Strong feeling of group identity, of belonging
    characterizes ethnicity

8
Problems encountered when defining ethnic group
  • Membership in an ethnic group is involuntary
  • He or she must be born into the group
  • Often individuals choose to discard their
    ethnicity

9
Problems encountered when defining ethnic group
  • Main problem is different groups base their
    identities on different traits
  • The Jewsprimarily means religion
  • The Amishboth folk culture and religion
  • African-Americansskin color
  • Swiss-Americansnational origin
  • German-Americansancestral language
  • Cuban-Americansmainly anti-Castro, and
    anti-Marxist sentiment

10
Problems encountered when defining ethnic group
  • Politics can also help provide the basis for the
    we/they dichotomy that underlies ethnicity

11
Role of ethnic groups
  • Keepers of distinctive cultural traditions
  • Focal point of various kinds of social
    interaction
  • Provide group identity, friendships, and marriage
    partners
  • Also provides a recreational outlet, business
    success, and a political power base
  • Can give rise to suspicion, friction, distrust,
    clannishness, and even violence

12
How ethnic minorities can be changed by their
host culture
  • Acculturation an ethnic group adopts enough of
    the host societys ways to be able to function
    economically and socially
  • Assimilation a complete blending with the host
    culture
  • Involves loss of all distinctive ethnic traits
  • American host culture now includes many
    descendants of Germans, Scots, Irish, French,
    Swedes, and Welsh
  • Intermarriage is perhaps the most effective
    assimilatory device

13
How ethnic minorities can be changed by their
host culture
  • In reality few ethnic groups have been
    assimilated in the so-called melting-pot
  • It was assumed all ethnic groups would eventually
    be assimilated
  • The last 25 years has witnessed a resurgence of
    ethnic identity in the United States, Canada,
    Europe, and elsewhere
  • Ethnicity easily made the transition from folk to
    popular culture
  • Popular culture reveals a vivid ethnic component

14
Ethnic geography
  • The study of ethnic geography is the study of
    spatial and ecological aspects of ethnicity
  • Ethnic groups often practice unique adaptive
    strategies
  • Normally occupy clearly defined areasurban and
    rural

15
Culture regions
  • Ethnic regions
  • Cultural diffusion and ethnicity
  • Ethnic ecology
  • Ethnic cultural integration
  • Ethnic landscapes

16
Culture groups typically occupy compact
territories
  • Ethnic formal culture regions can be mapped
  • Geographers rely on diverse data
  • Surnames in telephone directories
  • Census totals for mother tongue
  • Each method will produce a slightly different map
  • Such regions exist in most countries

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Ethnic formal culture regions
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Culture groups typically occupy compact
territories
  • Two distinct geographical types of ethnic regions
    exist
  • Ethnic minorities who reside in ancient home
    territories
  • Lands where their ancestors lived back into
    prehistoric times
  • Became ethnic when their territory was annexed
    into a larger independent state
  • Examples Basques of Spain, Navajo Indians of
    American Southwest
  • Place and region provide a basic element in their
    ethnic identity

20
Culture groups typically occupy compact
territories
  • Two distinct geographical types of ethnic regions
    exist
  • Results from migration when people move great
    distances
  • Emotional attachment tends to be weaker toward
    new homeland
  • Only after many generations pass do descendants
    of immigrants develop strong bonds to region and
    place

21
Ethnic culture regions in rural North America
  • Ethnic homelands
  • Cover large areas, often over-lapping state and
    provincial borders
  • Have sizable populations
  • Residents seek or enjoy some measure of political
    autonomy or self-rule
  • Populations usually exhibit a strong sense of
    attachment to the region
  • Most homelands belong to indigenous ethnic groups

22
Ethnic culture regions in rural North America
  • Ethnic homelands
  • Possess special, venerated places that serve to
    symbolize and celebrate the region shrines to
    the special identity of the group
  • Combines the attributes of both formal and
    functional culture regions
  • Regarded by some as incompletely developed
    nation-states
  • Because of sex, age, and geographical segregation
    tend to strengthen ethnicity
  • Long occupation helps people develop modes of
    life, behavior, tastes, and relationships
    regarded as the correct ones

23
Ethnic culture regions in rural North America
  • Examples of ethnic homelands in North America
  • Acadiana Louisiana French increasingly
    identified with the Cajun people and recognized
    as a perceptual region
  • Spanish-American highland New Mexico, Colorado,
    and South Texas
  • Navajo Reservation New Mexico and Arizona
  • French-Canadian centered on valley of lower St.
    Lawrence River in Quebec
  • Some include Deseret Mormon homeland in the
    Great Basin of the Intermontane West

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Ethnic culture regions in rural North America
  • Some ethnic homelands have experienced decline
    and decay
  • Pennsylvania Dutch weakened to almost
    extinction by assimilation
  • Southern Black Belt diminished by collapse of
    plantation-sharecrop system resulting in
    out-migration to urban areas
  • Mormon absorption into the American cultural
    mainstream
  • Non-ethnic immigration has damaged the
    Spanish-American homeland

26
Ethnic culture regions in rural North America
  • Most vigorous homelands are the French-Canadians
    and South Texas Mexican-Americans
  • Ethnic substrate
  • Occurs when a people in a homeland are
    assimilated into the host culture and a
    geographical residue remains
  • The resultant culture region retains some
    distinctiveness

27
Ethnic culture regions in rural North America
  • Ethnic substrate
  • Geographers often find traces of an ancient,
    vanished ethnicity in a region
  • Italian province of Tuscany owes both its name
    and some uniqueness to the Etruscan people who
    ceased as an ethnic group 2,000 years ago
  • Massive German presence in American Heartland
    helped shape cultural character of the Midwest,
    which can be said to have a German ethnic
    substrate

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Ethnic Island Westby, Wisconsin
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Ethnic Island Westby, Wisconsin
  • This small town is in Americas ethnically
    diverse rural heartland.
  • Westby was a Norwegian pioneer and the towns
    population is primarily Norwegian.

31
Ethnic Island Westby, Wisconsin
  • Although traditional events such as the fall
    lutefisk dinner and the May 17th Norwegian
    Independence Day celebration are celebrated, this
    ethnic group has essentially assimilated with the
    host culture.
  • Note the various popular cultural organizations
    and activities in this community.

32
Ethnic culture regions in rural North America
  • Ethnic islands in North America
  • Small dots in the countryside
  • Usually occupy less area than a county
  • Much smaller than a homeland-serve as home to
    only several hundred or several thousand people
  • More numerous than homelands or substrates
  • Many found in large areas of rural North America

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Ethnic culture regions in rural North America
  • Ethnic islands in North America
  • Crazy-quilt pattern found in some areas of
    Midwest
  • Germans form the largest group found in ethnic
    islandssoutheastern Pennsylvania and in
    Wisconsin
  • Scandinavians primarily Swedes and Norwegians
    came mainly to Minnesota, the eastern Dakotas,
    and western Wisconsin
  • Ukrainians settled mainly in the Canadian Prairie
    Provinces
  • Slavic groups mainly Poles and Czechs
    established scattered colonies in the Midwest
    and Texas

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Ethnic culture regions in rural North America
  • Ethnic islands develop because a minority group
    will tend to utilize space in such a way as to
    minimize the interaction distance between group
    members
  • The desire is to facilitate contacts within the
    community and minimize exposure to the outside
    world
  • The ideal shape of an ethnic island is circular
    or hexagonal
  • People are drawn to rural places where others of
    the same ethnic background are found

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Ethnic culture regions in rural North America
  • Survive from one generation to the next because
    most land is inherited
  • Sale of land is typically confined within the
    ethnic group, helping to preserve its identity
  • Social stigma is often attached to sale of land
    to outsiders
  • Small size makes populations more susceptible to
    acculturation and assimilation

40
Urban ethnic neighborhoods and ghettos
  • Formal ethnic culture regions occur in cities
    throughout the world
  • Minority people tend to create ethnic residential
    quarters
  • Ethnic neighborhood a voluntary community where
    people of like origin reside by choice showing a
    desire to maintain group cohesiveness

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Urban ethnic neighborhoods and ghettos
  • Benefits of the ethnic neighborhood
  • Common use of language
  • Nearby kin
  • Stores and services specially tailored to a
    certain groups tastes
  • Presence of factories relying on ethnically based
    division of labor
  • Institutions important to the group churches
    and lodges

43
Urban ethnic neighborhoods and ghettos
  • The ghetto traditionally been used to describe
    an area within the city where a certain ethnic
    group is forced to live
  • An involuntary community and as much a functional
    culture region as a formal one
  • Discrimination decides whether a ethnic group
    lives in a ghetto or voluntarily forms its own
    neighborhood
  • American society discriminates more against
    blacks and Asians

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Jewish Ghetto Salzburg, Austria
  • The name of this street is Judengasse Jew
    Street.
  • Here, as in many European cities, Jews were
    forced to live in a specific walled and gated
    area.

46
Jewish Ghetto Salzburg, Austria
  • Judengasse had 3000 residents by 1610.
  • Virtually all of Salzburgs Jewish population
    succumbed to the Nazi Holocaust.
  • The term ghetto derives from the Jewish quarter
    by the Ghetto Novo or New Foundry in Venice.

47
Urban ethnic neighborhoods and ghettos
  • Study of Cleveland, Ohio, by John Kain
  • Blacks are confined to a ghetto by discriminatory
    housing practices
  • Blacks more highly segregated residentially than
    white ethnic groups
  • Italians, Poles, Jews, Appalachian folk, and
    other white ethnic groups occupy neighborhoods
    rather than ghettos
  • These other white ethnic groups disperse to
    suburbs more readily than African-Americans

48
Urban ethnic neighborhoods and ghettos
  • Ethnic clustering survives relocation from
    neighborhoods to suburbs
  • Example of the Chinese in the San Gabriel Valley
    near Los Angeles
  • In ancient times, conquerors often forced
    vanquished native people to live in ghettos
  • Religious minorities usually received similar
    treatment
  • Sometimes walls were built around ghettos
  • Islamic cities had Christian districts
  • Medieval European cities had Jewish ghettos

49
Urban ethnic neighborhoods and ghettos
  • North American cities are more ethnically diverse
    than any other urban centers in the world
  • Ethnic neighborhoods became typical after about
    1840
  • Immigrant groups clustered together instead of
    dispersing
  • Ethnic groups generally came from different parts
    of Europe than those who moved to rural areas

50
Urban ethnic neighborhoods and ghettos
  • North American cities are more ethnically diverse
    than any other urban centers in the world
  • Catholic Irish, Italians, Poles, and East
    European Jews became the main urban ethnic groups
  • Other non-European groups later came to urban
    areas French-Canadians, southern blacks, Puerto
    Ricans, Appalachian whites, Amerindians

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Other ethnic migrants
  • As immigration laws changed, the ethnic variety
    in North American cities grew even greater
  • Asia, rather than Europe, is now the principal
    source continent for immigrants in the United
    States and Canada
  • Chinese, Koreans, and Vietnamese comprise the
    most numerous immigrant groups
  • Asia supplied 37 percent of all legal immigrant
    to United states in mid-1990s
  • Japanese ancestry forms the largest
    national-origin group in Hawaii

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Chinatown Victoria, British Columbia, Canada
  • A key link in a pattern of chain migration,
    Victorias Chinatown is Canadas oldest, the
    earliest gold-seekers coming by boat via San
    Francisco in 1858.
  • Between 1861 and 1884, nearly 16000 Chinese
    railroad workers funneled through Victoria to the
    mainland.

55
Chinatown Victoria, British Columbia, Canada
  • Discrimation concentrated the community and by
    1910, Chinatown was the nations largest,
    comprising six city blocks and 3000 Chinese.
  • Second to Vancouver until 1950, it now ranks
    eighth.
  • Decline followed the 1923-47 prohibition of
    Chinese immigration.

56
Chinatown Victoria, British Columbia, Canada
  • However, in the 1980s, it became the first to
    undergo a comprehensive rehabilitation program
    and to have a Chinese arch. The Tong Ji Men
    Gate of Harmonious Interest, replete with
    Animist, Buddhist and Taoist motifs, symbolizes
    Canadian multiculturalism.

57
Other ethnic migrants
  • Many West Coast cities have acquired sizable
    Asiatic populations
  • Vancouver
  • Eleven percent Asian in 1981
  • Has absorbed more immigrants, particularly from
    Hong Kong

58
Other ethnic migrants
  • Latin America, including Caribbean countries, has
    surpassed Europe as a source of
  • immigrants to North America
  • East Coast cities have large numbers from the
    West Indies
  • Miami has become a West Indies/Caribbean city As
    early as the 1970s, New York City was receiving
    large numbers of immigrants from the Dominican
    Republic and Jamaica
  • Image of Canada and the United States as
    predominantly European may change

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Other ethnic migrants
  • We need to be reminded not all emigrant ethnic
    groups live in North America
  • About 28 million ethnic Chinese reside outside
    China and Taiwan
  • Most live in Southeast Asian countries
  • Indonesia has over 7 million
  • Thailand has nearly 6 million
  • Malaysia has more than 5 million

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Other ethnic migrants
  • We need to be reminded not all emigrant ethnic
    groups live in North America
  • Auckland, New Zealand, has the largest Polynesian
    population of any city in the world
  • Germany, The United Kingdom, Italy, and Spain are
    home to millions of Africans, Turks, and Asians

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Ethnic NeighborhoodSao Paulo, Brazil
  • This torii marks entry to Liberdade, a Japanese
    community.
  • Japanese were initially recruited to work on
    coffee fazendas and by 1924, 34,000 had been
    subsidized by the Sao Paulo state government.

64
Ethnic NeighborhoodSao Paulo, Brazil
  • After 1920, emigration was subsidized by Japan
    and arrivals peaked in 1933 with 25,000.
  • Highly successful farmers, especially in market
    gardening, many eventually moved into cities to
    form distinctly Japanese communities.

65
Other ethnic migrants
  • Urban ethnic neighborhoods tend to be transitory
  • Ethnic groups remain while undergoing
    acculturation
  • Central-city ethnic neighborhoods experience a
    life cycle
  • Often one group is replace by a later-arriving
    one
  • Example of Bostons West End
  • Mainly an Irish area in the nineteenth century
  • At the beginning of the twentieth century Jews
    replaced the Irish
  • Poles and Italians replaced Jews in the late
    1930s

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Other ethnic migrants
  • Urban ethnic neighborhoods tend to be transitory
  • In Miamis Little Havana neighborhood Central
    Americans replaced Cubans
  • Chicagos Adams area provides an almost complete
    history of American migratory pattern
  • First came the Germans and Irish
  • Next Greeks, Poles, French Canadians, Czechs, and
    Russian Jews
  • Soon the Italians pressed those listed above
  • The Italians were challenged by Chicanos and a
    small group of Puerto Ricans

68
Other ethnic migrants
  • Urban ethnic neighborhoods tend to be transitory
  • Older groups often established new ethnic
    neighborhoods in suburban areas

69
Ethnic mix and national character
  • Any country is the sum of its cultural parts
  • Each country has its own unique mixes of national
    origin and ethnic groups that help shape national
    character
  • Russia has less diversity and a largely different
    array of minorities than the United States

70
Ethnic mix and national character
  • Canada is also strikingly different from the
    United States
  • Far higher proportions of English, French, Scots,
    and Ukrainians
  • Far fewer Germans, Africans, and Hispanics

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Ethnic mix and national character
  • Most persons in the United States claiming German
    origin have in fact been acculturated and
    assimilated
  • They have become part of the host culture
  • Massive absorption into the mainstream culture
  • Major factor in shaping a national character
    distinct from that of Canada
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