Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is such a sad thread. Some things can be part of more than one American cultures the same time (eg, Mahjong). AND some ethnic groups in different part of the country or heck a different part of a city, may not do things people associate with AA culture (eg, just because you’re AA doesn’t mean you grew up on collards). Yeesh.
It is sad. Not too long ago things were the “American culture” and now it’s all getting divided up. It’s the wrong direction and it’s such a bummer
Not true at all.
All regions in the US have always had their own “culture”.
Texas vs. nc bbq
Chicago vs ny pizza
Southern food vs Midwestern food
On and on
It’s actually better we can share in all cultures.
Exactly- share all cultures, the American culture being a blend of them all. And your examples are REGIONAL which is not anywhere near the same tho g as different races claiming things as “theirs”
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A little primer on AA culture: we like to put our own twists on mainstream US culture. What we like doesn’t have to have an African origin or come from our own history for it to be embraced as “a black thing”. And something being “a black thing” doesn’t mean that we’re saying we invented it. Only that we’ve embraced it and it’s a recognizable part of our cultural identity.
So if I grew up playing Uno with my grandparents, moved on to playing it with my white friends at college and now play it with my white kids, doesn’t that make it a “white thing” for me? Of course not. It’s a game meant for and played by people of all races. It doesn’t belong to a set culture. It can be your thing or my thing. It’s not a race thing.
We have all really gone over the edge of ridiculous race baiting issues.
Grits
Collards
Fried fish
All part of black culture but also white peoples ear it.
Do you not understand culture?
I think the point is that something ubiquitous is not uniquely cultural by definition. I would be like saying drinking water is a part of XX cultural identity.
It’s like saying eating pasta is part of Italian culture.
No it isn't. Some parts of Italy don't eat a lot of pasta, and every culture has some form of noodle dish. Italian pasta is a culinary stye from a particular area -- it isn't Uno.
However, is appears that adults gathering for the purpose of playing Uno is a special thing in some Black communities, like Bunco in Southern social circles, or Bridge in midwestern suburbs, so there you have it. Something ubiquitous also becomes cultural.
😂😂
You are arguing pasta is not Italian because they don’t eat it in every region.
You know if you talk to a black person from Georgia their experience and music sand traditions in a are different than a black person from Brooklyn. Doesn’t mean crunk is not part of black culture because it but a Brooklyn thing.
Anonymous wrote:The only card game association o have is that Euchre is for white midwestern people.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's tied to cookouts and family gatherings during times of joy and sadness. Spades and dominoes are even worse, tables get flipped, people get cursed out or cry.
Please don’t say this—white people will take it as gospel that all black families are like this. We are black and nothing like this has ever happened at any gathering.
I will say that Scrabble got intense in our household growing up and my younger bro did flip the Scrabble board on one occasion. We were religious so no cursing, though.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is such a sad thread. Some things can be part of more than one American cultures the same time (eg, Mahjong). AND some ethnic groups in different part of the country or heck a different part of a city, may not do things people associate with AA culture (eg, just because you’re AA doesn’t mean you grew up on collards). Yeesh.
It is sad. Not too long ago things were the “American culture” and now it’s all getting divided up. It’s the wrong direction and it’s such a bummer
Not true at all.
All regions in the US have always had their own “culture”.
Texas vs. nc bbq
Chicago vs ny pizza
Southern food vs Midwestern food
On and on
It’s actually better we can share in all cultures.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are 470 variations of UNO.
I’m claiming the other 469.
Back off b$tchs
Better post!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is such a sad thread. Some things can be part of more than one American cultures the same time (eg, Mahjong). AND some ethnic groups in different part of the country or heck a different part of a city, may not do things people associate with AA culture (eg, just because you’re AA doesn’t mean you grew up on collards). Yeesh.
It is sad. Not too long ago things were the “American culture” and now it’s all getting divided up. It’s the wrong direction and it’s such a bummer
Anonymous wrote:There are 470 variations of UNO.
I’m claiming the other 469.
Back off b$tchs
Anonymous wrote:This is such a sad thread. Some things can be part of more than one American cultures the same time (eg, Mahjong). AND some ethnic groups in different part of the country or heck a different part of a city, may not do things people associate with AA culture (eg, just because you’re AA doesn’t mean you grew up on collards). Yeesh.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ok, who’s claiming Crazy Eights? If it’s still up for grabs, I’m bagging it for the Jews.
Nope you have Mahjong
Not a card game! And I think the Chinese would have something to say about it.
Anonymous wrote:This is such a sad thread. Some things can be part of more than one American cultures the same time (eg, Mahjong). AND some ethnic groups in different part of the country or heck a different part of a city, may not do things people associate with AA culture (eg, just because you’re AA doesn’t mean you grew up on collards). Yeesh.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ok, who’s claiming Crazy Eights? If it’s still up for grabs, I’m bagging it for the Jews.
Nope you have Mahjong
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A little primer on AA culture: we like to put our own twists on mainstream US culture. What we like doesn’t have to have an African origin or come from our own history for it to be embraced as “a black thing”. And something being “a black thing” doesn’t mean that we’re saying we invented it. Only that we’ve embraced it and it’s a recognizable part of our cultural identity.
So if I grew up playing Uno with my grandparents, moved on to playing it with my white friends at college and now play it with my white kids, doesn’t that make it a “white thing” for me? Of course not. It’s a game meant for and played by people of all races. It doesn’t belong to a set culture. It can be your thing or my thing. It’s not a race thing.
We have all really gone over the edge of ridiculous race baiting issues.
Grits
Collards
Fried fish
All part of black culture but also white peoples ear it.
Do you not understand culture?
I think the point is that something ubiquitous is not uniquely cultural by definition. I would be like saying drinking water is a part of XX cultural identity.
It’s like saying eating pasta is part of Italian culture.
No it isn't. Some parts of Italy don't eat a lot of pasta, and every culture has some form of noodle dish. Italian pasta is a culinary stye from a particular area -- it isn't Uno.
However, is appears that adults gathering for the purpose of playing Uno is a special thing in some Black communities, like Bunco in Southern social circles, or Bridge in midwestern suburbs, so there you have it. Something ubiquitous also becomes cultural.