on 08-03-2013 11:25 PM
Not necessarily the country you are born in. Nor what your ancestors were. But what culture informs your every day life. Your culture is an integral part of your life.
For example, I am born in Australia to Italian parents. I barely speak Italian but my cultural heritage clearly shows through in how I celebrate events like Christmas and Easter. And I affiliate myself with things 'Italian'. My kids have been brought up with a strong sense of their heritage and even tho they are even far more removed from Italian culture, they easily identify as being Italian.
I am an Australian Italian. You?
(BTW, if you consider your nationality to be from England ,Ireland, Scotland etc then you are Anglo Saxon rather than European)
on 08-03-2013 11:25 PM
And if you are other, then please elaborate. 🙂
on 08-03-2013 11:28 PM
And if you are other, then please elaborate. 🙂
This forum is too public to give such info.
on 08-03-2013 11:31 PM
you didn't think this thru did ya?
What are kiwis or americans, latinos africans??
WHere do mix nationality goes?
Most people living in Aus fall under AUSTRALIAN culture regardless of their ancestory.
THis thread is a FAIL.
on 08-03-2013 11:31 PM
I am Australian, married to another Australian who was not born in Australia
on 08-03-2013 11:31 PM
Oh no!!! I didnt read the OP :^O
Change my vote from european to anglo :^O
on 08-03-2013 11:57 PM
What are kiwis or americans,
They are anglos. Unless they are culturally strong Maoris or black Americans.
latinos africans??
They are other.
WHere do mix nationality goes?
Wherever their culture is most dominant in their lives. My kids are half Italian from me and half Canadian from their dad. There is no connection to their Canadian roots at all.
Most people living in Aus fall under AUSTRALIAN culture regardless of their ancestory.
Read my post again.
I said: "what culture informs your every day life. Your culture is an integral part of your life.". In Sydney central the vast majority would identify as being Asian regardless of how long they have been in Australia.
THis thread is a FAIL.
I disagree.
on 09-03-2013 09:49 AM
What nationality/culture are you?
Not necessarily the country you are born in. Nor what your ancestors were. But what culture informs your every day life. Your culture is an integral part of your life.
OK. I'd have to go back up to 160yrs in some cases to consider where my ancestors where born anyway.I'd say a lot culture you listed as options have been bred out of me in that time.
Nationality: Australian
Culture: Australian
on 09-03-2013 09:52 AM
If you take that option out you make me feel uncultured
on 09-03-2013 11:37 AM
agrees with bob