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If BosWash consumed Virginia and went down to NC and GA, would they cease being Southern in culture? |
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"Why cannot Japanese culture include McDonald's burgers and fries, KFC fried chicken, Coca-Cola, American pop music, American TV shows, Hollywood movies, etc.?" "Why cannot German culture include bérets, baguettes and the Eiffel Tower?" |
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More goes into defining a cultural region than its demographics. If we're saying Miami's Cuban population makes it lean away from being a part of The South then we'd have a map of cities all over The South with asterisks next to their name, simply because it contains they contain a demographic that doesn't typify The South. Raleigh and Huntsville are perfect examples. They have the greatest concentrations of research/tech/engineering (normalizing for population, of course) in The South, with transplants pouring out if their asses. But, I think you'd be hard pressed to find a single person that does not consider those two cities Southern. Miami isn't, not Southern because it has a large Cuban population, it's simply a Southern city that happens to have a large Cuban population. |
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That begs the question, is eating KFC at Christmas "American culture" when there is no such tradition in America itself? Or how about this one: I think everyone can agree sauerkraut is a part of "traditional" German cuisine. And yet it didn't originate in Germany, or even Europe. Sauerkraut is actually from China, transmitted to central Europe via the Tartars in the middle ages. And of course this doesn't even get into all the issues brought up by the Colombian exchange. Is pizza not Italian because tomatoes are from South America? 250 years ago your average Italian might've thought the dish would kill them, tomatoes commonly being seen as poisonous at the time. And they certainly would've thought of tomatoes as exotic and foreign. Wait 200 years and chowing down on fried chicken at Christmastime will have as much of a history in Japan as pizza in Italy or modern sushi does in Japan today . Makes one wonder if it will be considered part of "traditional Japanese culture" by then. |
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In other words - things can change; someday, KFC might be culturally Japanese and Virginia might be culturally Yankee. Just because KFC was unarguably not Japanese at all at some point in the past, doesn't mean KFC can't eventually become typical Japanese food at some point in the future. |
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I personally think the answer to that question is obvious, but it seems not everyone agrees. |
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Much of the South is very much "mainstream America." Transplants and "change" aren't at all marginal to the region. |
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Texas was never Alabama or Georgia but it's own thing. Arkansas and Tennessee are also different than these Deep South states. |
What's strange is the very seem people who are asserting "change" and 'history is not static" are the most adamant about removing Virginia from the South.
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I agree that Virginia now looks more towards the NE than south. Parts of it are southern, but so are parts of Maryland and even Pennsylvania.
Once Richmond no longer feels strongly southern, Virginia clearly joins the NE. Same with Jacksonville in Florida, once it flips, there can be no argument that the state is no longer southern. The rest of the historical south is still pretty solid with mainstream islands within. |
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Miami wasn't settled or developed by "Southerners" to begin with. The argument you are making makes sense if you are talking about Atlanta because no matter how many different types of people move there that city is still drenched in Southern history & culture. Miami never was. |
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