Not asking if you agree or disagree,
do you understand it?
"There are, broadly speaking, cultural appropriation, cultural appreciation, and cultural exchange. Cultural exchange is when both sides enter into relationship as equals and both sides give and take, and both sides benefit. Ex. When trade routes first open between countries. Cultural appreciation is when one engages in the cultural practices traditional to another group of people not as parody or commodity but in deference and as an act of respect. Ex. A business associate from another country in having dinner in your home and you cook dishes from her native country or you perform a ritual custom like the Japanese tea ceremony. And then there is cultural appropriation, which includes such things as using native cultures as sports mascots, having ghetto themed black-face parties, or stereotypical representations of Arabs in action films. What appropriations have in common is that they use the cultural archetype, ritual or artifact in a incorrect or even deliberately disrespectful way.
Now any combination of those three classifications can occur at the same time and both the borrower and the borrowie can get their signals crossed. Hence the contention."
"Traditional to another group of people"
"Both sides".
How do you define a culture and how do you decide who's the outsider?
I was raised a Catholic and my entire family is Catholic. What if I used the symbols of Catholicism, not as respect or because I liked the aesthetic, but as parody or criticism of Catholicism? Am I safe from the accusation of 'cultural appropriation'? Isn't the using of the symbols in a hurtful way what's wrong, not that I do, or do not, belong to the culture?
What if I use something not in a way that's mutually beneficial, and not out of 'respect' or 'deference' but because I like the way something looks?
