In the past personal identities were usually assigned to them by hegemonic culture primarily based on conceptualization of identity. Hegemonic culture dominates identity discourse by breaking the boundary between ethnic groups and cultural groups and separating and defining them. However, in contemporary discourses, individuals often assign identities to themselves in times of social change. The period of resistance is often the most easily recalled example, but the subtle trend of society can have a big impact if there is no social conscience often.
Identity: Identity is a psychological process. This is about his or her opinion on individuals and the environment. I am aware of themselves being related to other people, such as families and groups that they constitute social networks. For minorities, their identity reflects how most people are aware of it. Identity is functional and therefore ensures continuity and growth. Minorities: Since it is a group of people with unique identities and cultures that are different from other societies, it is socially and legally excluded from most people. Examples include immigration, ethnic minorities, ethnic minorities, people with different sexual orientation, people with disabilities. Minorities of intercultural learning methods are people with less social awareness and opportunities.
A cultural identity is an identity or emotion belonging to a group. It is part of a person's self-concept and self-awareness, related to any social group with nationality, race, religion, social class, generation, place, or unique culture. Thus, cultural identity is a characteristic of an individual and is also a characteristic of the same group of members with the same cultural characteristics. Various modern cultural studies and social theories have studied cultural identity. In the last few decades, a new form of identity has emerged that breaks individual understanding into a coherent overall theme that is a collection of different cultural identifiers. These cultural identifiers may be the result of various conditions including location, gender, race, history, nationality, language, gender, religion, ethnicity, aesthetics, and even food. As one author wrote, we are aware of consistency and fragmentation.