Anonymous wrote:PP who claims that the US and UK are culturally indistinguishable is very wrong. I thought that too when I moved to the US from Britain about twenty years ago and it was a massive culture shock.
Some examples:
Despite not being a religious country (admitting you are religious, esp Christian, in the UK will lead to ridicule and is an electoral liability) Easter is a national holiday, with a four day weekend. There is no Easter bunny. The shops are full of chocolate eggs. Not like the ones sold here. Large hollow ones, filled with candy or chocolate. On Good Friday, you eat hot cross buns.
Christmas is all about drinking. Brits drink heavily and binge drinking is encouraged.
British people are culturally unable to brag. If you get a promotion you should down play it, if you mention it at all.
We play football. With a round ball. This is a predominantly male game and always has been. Girls play net ball. We don't play baseball or American football.
We are easily embarrassed and apologize if we bump into you or have to complain in any way.
We speak a different language that you may not understand.
British people wait to be introduced. It would be very unusual for a British person to walk up to you and introduce themselves.
We have a very different education system which involves specializing at 16. We think multiple choice tests are a joke. 60 percent in an exam is a very good mark. 70 percent is excellent or amazing/unheard of depending on the subject. Our degrees take three years and are more specialized than yours, but less broad. Many young people stop studying maths at 16, for example, yet are successful at university.
We have very broad food differences from tea to bangers and mash. Cottage pie, steak and kidney pie, Cornish pasties, fish pie, Sunday roast, Yorkshire pudding, treacle pudding, Marmite, beans on toast, jacket potatoes, shepherd's pie, fish and chips, mushy peas, scones and clotted cream.
We also have a different culture and national views re. guns, the government and its role, the welfare state, health care, police, etc.
Despite the allegedly common language, the differences are stark.
Anonymous wrote:
As an international family, who knows lot of other international families, I hope you understand that we have to be VERY protective of our native countries' cultures and habits. We take it very seriously. It has nothing to do with bias against the USA.
This is because the host country will be PREDOMINANT in our children's lives. The host culture will seep in without any kind of effort, while the language, manners and cultures of the countries of origin have to be force-fed in order to be integrated completely.
I lived in foreign countries as a child (foreign to my parents' origins), and absorbed my host countries' cultures so easily! Meanwhile my mother had a terrible time trying to teach me her language and culture. My father abandoned any efforts to teach me his language, although he cooked his country's foods.
So now my children live in the USA, despite the fact that neither myself nor my husband are originally from this country, and we listen to our country's news in the language, we pay for a weekend school for our kids where they can get one of our native languages taught by teachers with a diploma from our country, and generally expose them to all kinds of cultural things from our countries.
I'm not saying these people you know aren't going a little too far. Maybe they are. But it's better to start out this way, because Americanisms will quickly engulf all their efforts once their child starts school, even if they find an international or British school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
WTF are "British table manners"?!
British person
My question exactly. I am a Brit, my husband is American. There are certain table manners that I prefer and that he is lax on. Didn't occur to me that it was actually a cultural difference. There are a couple of cultural differences around food/eating that I can think of -- we don't cut food with the fork; we don't leave hot food on the table while we eat a salad course; in general, we prefer food hotter and are less tolerant of food which has cooled off ... but that seems to be all I can think of.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PP at 23:04, it's naive to say that cultural differences aren't valid unless they're extreme. There are no shades of grey in your world. As someone with lots of real-world experience, I've found that sometimes the most tricky cultural differences are the most subtle.
Again I ask you - where are the institutions devoted to preserving and handing down these tricky, subtle cultural differences? Where are the keepers of the British culture in the US?
I guess you've never been to the British embassy or participated in any of their events, or joined an alumni club or looked into the British schools. They are absolutely there and there is a thriving ex pat community if that's what you are interested in. You can also arrange to have British food stuffs shipped here and many people do.
British schools in DC market themselves as international institutions, not bastions of Britishness. Compared to, say, Persian or Chinese community in DC, the British landscape is barren.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PP at 23:04, it's naive to say that cultural differences aren't valid unless they're extreme. There are no shades of grey in your world. As someone with lots of real-world experience, I've found that sometimes the most tricky cultural differences are the most subtle.
Again I ask you - where are the institutions devoted to preserving and handing down these tricky, subtle cultural differences? Where are the keepers of the British culture in the US?
I guess you've never been to the British embassy or participated in any of their events, or joined an alumni club or looked into the British schools. They are absolutely there and there is a thriving ex pat community if that's what you are interested in. You can also arrange to have British food stuffs shipped here and many people do.
Anonymous wrote:
WTF are "British table manners"?!
British person
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PP at 23:04, it's naive to say that cultural differences aren't valid unless they're extreme. There are no shades of grey in your world. As someone with lots of real-world experience, I've found that sometimes the most tricky cultural differences are the most subtle.
Again I ask you - where are the institutions devoted to preserving and handing down these tricky, subtle cultural differences? Where are the keepers of the British culture in the US?