Course Info
Peopling of New York City
Wednesdays: 1:40-4:20Contact
Prof. Donald Scott
Email:donald.scott@qc.cuny.edu
Office: Powdermaker 352ZZ
Office Hours:Tsai-Shiou Hsieh (ITF)
Email: tsaishiou@gmail.com
Office Hours: Wed. 9-3*
*make an appointment
Honors Hall 20Add yourself to the site!
If you want to add yourself as a user, please log in, using your existing Macaulay Eportfolio account.
-
Recent Posts
Recent Comments
- karissac on Basic Population Demographics of Jackson Heights 1980-2010
- Edd's Stories on A family Divided
- Tsai-Shiou Hsieh on Questions for Jackson Heights Interviews
- karissac on Our Website :D
- Kiran Tak on Race and Ethnicity- Never Substitute One for the Other
Categories
Category Archives: Reading Responses
Who chooses who you are?
Sherri-Ann P. Butterfield tackles the question of identity in second generation West Indian immigrants and how second generation immigrants see themselves in a New York setting. She hypothesizes certain types of self-identification for the people she interviews. Some people may … Continue reading
Posted in Reading Responses
Leave a comment
Second-generation Immigrants
This weeks articles mainly focused on second-generation immigrants and how they are struggling to find their unique identity within the vast and diverse culture of New York City that can be overwhelming. In Butterfield’s article, she goes through many personal … Continue reading
Posted in Reading Responses
Leave a comment
The Looking-Glass Self and West Indian Identity
Butterfield’s conception of West Indian self-identity reminded me of a concept I learned last semester in Sociology 101. This concept is called the Looking-Glass Self, created by Charles Horton Cooley in 1902. It says that we view ourselves and form … Continue reading
Posted in Reading Responses
Leave a comment
Same Skin, Different Culture
Sherri-Ann P. Butterfield’s study on the way West Indians are identified versus what their ethnicity actually is, reveals some harsh truths about the way society views people. At first glance, people usually don’t take the time to ask where a … Continue reading
Posted in Reading Responses
Leave a comment
How Education affected West Indian Identity Formation
What really appealed to me in this week’s readings was the discussion of education and its involvement in shaping the identity of second generation immigrants. Schools are one of the biggest catalysts of cultural diversity here in New York. During … Continue reading
Posted in Reading Responses
Leave a comment
Racial and Ethnic components of identity
In Sheri Ann Butterfield’s article, she describes the identity of second generation West Indians in terms of both race and ethnicity. She asserts that West Indians do not make a choice between race and identity; they embrace both. According to … Continue reading
Posted in Reading Responses
Leave a comment
Progress Report
My group is zeroing on the religion of Jackson Heights. Our initial plan was to find the 3 most common religions practiced in the area and then focusing on those. At first we had trouble finding exact percentages of the … Continue reading
Posted in Reading Responses
Leave a comment
African American or West Indian?
Sherri-Ann P. Butterfield conducted a very interesting study on the identity formation and classification of second generation West Indians. The main issue for West Indians is that they continue to be distinguished by the color of their skin instead of … Continue reading
Posted in Reading Responses
Leave a comment
Does Diversity Lead to Disunity?
There is one observation in the Butterfield piece that really struck me more than any other, and that is the assertion of one interviewed subject that the very existence of such a broad and diverse range of cultural groups in … Continue reading
Posted in Reading Responses
Leave a comment
Accepting Black, White, and Every Color In Between
One of Butterfield’s main points in her article is that a racial identity and an ethnic one are not mutually exclusive traits, and that a person can have both, rather than choose between the two. For example, a person can … Continue reading
Posted in Reading Responses
Leave a comment