Very well made ! I expected more views !!! I love this channel a lot
@Tiras504
3 жыл бұрын
Great video ,and channel . Deserves more views.
@rmmd1086
3 жыл бұрын
Great Video! Thank you for sharing! Been to many of the places shown, and hope to visit the rest. Traveling to learn is never wrong.
@DayveeSutton1
3 жыл бұрын
agreed. thank you for watching!
@justaddhoneyteaco1263
3 жыл бұрын
Great definition of the two! I hope more people learn and lean in.
@grucru8615
3 жыл бұрын
Stop with this appropriation crap. If you steal something someone has created then that is fine, you can challenge them over intellectual property in court. Making up things like ‘blood lines’ and ‘culture’ to prevent people from enjoying an activity is pure racism. I can’t wait to shame a little non white girl for reading the King James Bible, enjoying opera, practising karate, engaging in ballet because she is the wrong colour skin and ‘culture’ Let’s take it to the logical next step and ban ourselves from white and Asian inventions like the internet, iPhone, GPS, air conditioning, KZitem…. What next…segregating people on buses?
@frikidiki-es
3 жыл бұрын
Ugh yes I don't know how you get like 500k views on these videos, these are amazing! Cultural appropriation has been a stressful conversation to navigate for sure, I feel that intimate personal relationships should be facilitating that cultural exchange every time, recognizing that white supremacy and the colonialist-capitalist coninuum has always been rooted in theft, exploitation, and cultural erasure. Also I feel its important to acknowledge the role of money in this equation - that people from dominant cultures (imo even BIPOC from the US) should not be seeking to profit from marginalized cultures without even beginning to establish those relationships and honor and pay the people who live that culture on a daily basis. Sidenote/ I just found out I got the opportunity to teach English in Spain and I am eager to take tips from your videos, jump out of my comfort zone, and actually challenge myself to meet new people and really get to know them and their stories and cultures. You are definitely an inspiration to me to make life happen by starting with a smile, a friendly conversation, and lots of questions! 😌 I have been meaning to ask, do you speak any languages besides English?
@frikidiki-es
3 жыл бұрын
*Don't know how you don't get 500k views
@DayveeSutton1
3 жыл бұрын
@@frikidiki-es ah. thank you. Well, my channel is just getting started, so hopefully one day more people will be exposed to my work. thank you for supporting. what you said about money is very interesting. there is indeed something to that. profiting from marginalized cultures is colonialism and i am glad you recognize that as we together can continue to work to dismantle it.
@tamikabaziliobruce1853
3 жыл бұрын
This was such a great video and quick lesson on the differences. 💛
@DayveeSutton1
3 жыл бұрын
thank you for watching!
@arthurraleigh5812
3 жыл бұрын
@@DayveeSutton1 Hi Dayvee. I liked you and your video of the drug den in Perla, so I clicked on this video about cultural appropriation - a subject I have sort of avoided because on the surface it always seemed stupid to me, but since you seemed cool, after seeing the Perla video, I figured I'd give it a try. I didn't finish watching it, tho, sorry.. as I heard your definition. I'm a 40 yr old white dude from Montana (of all places) that has travelled a good amount around the world. I have learned and become fluent in spanish, I have studied Afro-Cuban drumming in Cuba, with Cubans, learned and started a salsa band, I play all the "latin" percussion instruments..etc. So I want to know that if in your eyes, I have culturally appropriated? I may have been paid for a few gigs playing this music (not many at all) or benefited in non monetary ways. If you say that only white people can culturally appropriate, period, then I think I have a problem with that, because much of human history is a history of conquering... At one point Iraq (I think it was Iraq, maybe Iran.. Anyway, Arabs) conquered Spain. So now are white Spaniards not allowed to play a doumbek (arabic drum) or where an arab hat or a turbin? Dark Spaniards maybe are ok to do it? Everywhere a turist goes, the natives from that place are selling their clothes and bags and hats etc, - are we not allowed to buy and wear them? My experience is that the natives like it when I wear their hats and clothes. Maybe Adele has a Jamaican friend, hung out in Jamaica and took some stuff back home with her. And who cares if so? I don't know, maybe I'm just more open minded? 🤷🏼♂️ Anyway, I want you to know that my intention is a kind and sincere reply, with just my questions and thoughts to you. Thanks for reading. Peace
@DayveeSutton1
3 жыл бұрын
@Arthur Raleigh Charbonneau Thanks for your thoughtful response. First, no - you spent time in your travels immersing and sharing cultures. I believe that's the right way - the way sharing is done is slowly, instead on superficial. I tried to explain that in this video just in relation to travel. However, we know historically that if someone took the path you took, and then took credit as if they invented the genre - that is appropriation. Getting paid off of something you learn, while respecting and honoring how you got there is not a violation. When it comes to the historical examples you laid out - i think there is a little conflation going on. But, I don't have time to unpack that right now...😉
@arthurraleigh5812
3 жыл бұрын
@@DayveeSutton1 Thanks for taking the time to reply! That is awesome. Ok the taking credit thing makes sense. Interesting about conflation.. I guess I just wondered how far back are were talking.. I mean that is all that music is, is kids taking from the history or music, little from here, a little from there and calling it new - then the new generation doesn't know that it had already been done before. Anyway, you mentioned corn rows.. (again the example of music, sorry, it's my cultural context..) Well in the US we have always loved black musicians and music, and their style. It doesn't matter that they are black to us kids, because we just listen to the music and look at them and we like it. And so to imitate them if you are white is bad? It just doesn't seem bad to me. I grew up on a native American reservation, as a white guy, and race was never a thing for us kids, until later when the adults told us that it is an issue. Anyway, I don't know. It seems complicated and not worth the thoughts lol. When such rampant inequality with the 1%, and capitalism killing the natural earth, this cultural stuff seems unimportant. But I dunno
@hannahmotley1863
Жыл бұрын
The way I’ve always decipherd it was “if it has spiritual significance it’s probably appropriation not appreciation” for example, white sage is appropriation because it is spiritually significant to indigenous cultures, or how Locs are appropriation because not only do they have spiritual significance, but you also cannot loc white hair, you can mat it but unless it’s coily/kinky it won’t truly loc. this isn’t always true, for example owning a dream catcher isn’t cultural appropriation, BUT owning a dream catcher is appropriation if it isn’t indigenous made, or handmade while keeping the Reiligious significance in mind. Another good way to figure out if it’s appropriation or appreciation is the history behind it. Ex.) black hairstyles have been historically suppressed, so when a white person wears a black hairstyle, like cornrows or Bantu knots, while POC are still being suppressed and bullied for this, it kinda stings. I’ve heard a lot of people use “culture is meant to be shared” as a defense for anyone who calls out cultural appropriation as being a snowflake, but is it really sharing if yt ppl are stealing it? And is it really sharing if the culture of origin is saying that it is sacred? The most important thing is to listen to what the people are saying. If black people say it’s appropriation to wear cornrows, don’t wear them. Chances are they know what they’re talking about. Of corse there will always be POC who say that you can, but what is the majority of the people saying? And of corse don’t do anything culturally significant without doing your research. I know that as a white person, I need to step back and let POC speak, but I also know that I live in a majority white conservative town, so this still need to get out there. I would love to hear your, or any other POC’s take on this, and please for the love of god don’t start a war in the comments.
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