Cultural competence and invisible culture - "I don't have a culture"
Here's a reflection I shared with the class during my 2018 studies, about regarding cultural competence and "invisible culture." ___ So I've been trying to work on my cultural competence, for instance by reading the chapters on Maori and Pakeha culture in the Pro Practice textbook. Anyway, there's this idea (that I've come across before) that Pakeha, as members of a dominant culture, often say things like "I don't have a culture" or "I'm just a kiwi." This has been referred to as invisible culture . I'm a bit torn about this idea. On the one hand, it makes sense that members of the majority wouldn't feel defined by their ethnicity or culture, and might assume that aspects of their upbringing were "only natural", or universal to all people - when in fact some of them might vary from culture to culture. But on the other hand, I've often said in the past that I don't "identify" as ...