com·mu·ni·ty /kəˈmyo͞onədē/ noun
- a group of people living in the same place or having a particular characteristic in common. “the scientific community”
- a feeling of fellowship with others, as a result of sharing common attitudes, interests, and goals. “the sense of community that organized religion can provide”
Community is a way of defining reality. At one time, the community was the group that showed up in the village square to shop. Or maybe a community was a group who immigrated from a certain region and settled in a new region because of similar traditions. Community can be united by shared interests: sports, literary, scientific. But one thing guaranteed in human evolution is that change is constant, Homo Sapiens are not evolutionarily stagnant. As our self-identities shift in a global economy, the idea of community also evolves.
It seems at this time in our cultural history, the definition of “community” has become fluid. The idea of community can be subsumed by a larger cultural reality. For example, movements like Black Lives Matter have a way of defining a cultural reality whose narrative can be manipulated into running in conflict with a predetermined perception of culture.
“Community” should be personal and individually defined. It’s easier to recognize a community one has defined on one’s own from one that has been defined externally. For example, in the recently released book Caste: The Origin of our Discontents, Isabel Wilkerson theorizes that the notion of “black” and “white” in America did not exist until immigrants arrived on the continent. People were Igbo and Norwegian, Yoruba and Iberian. The notion of race disparity based on skin color was to reinforce the American cultural acceptance of slavery.
“Community builder, entrepreneur and co-founder of strategic advisory firm Community, Fabian Pfortmüller argues that since we are now living in big, modern cities, the term community needs to be updated….Instead of linking communities only to places or ideals, he suggests focusing more on the human relationships within them, defining it simply as ‘a group of people that care about each other and feel they belong together,’” says Valentina Egoavil Medina in AKOU. “….I started to connect with people over our mutual cultural confusion. Once here, I started to see a different type of community spirit, one that doesn’t always have something to do with your roots or the place you grew up in.”
This revelation is not born of a disdain for traditionalism, but rather an observation of cultural trends. Community may be considered “family, friends, and colleagues,” but the diversity of America means that “[t]oday, a community is no longer only linked to a physical place or a group of people who all know each other, all sharing the same ideals, goals or interests. We all build and nurture our own, unique group of people… a web of loose ties that sometimes coexist in parallel worlds, sometimes brush alongside each other and other times come together as one. …community and the sense of belonging that comes with it is not always black and white. It can be unique to you and your needs and at the end of the day it always comes down to the human connections you make… a hand-full of people that can feel like home.”
For the next issue, we seek your individual definition of community. What does community mean to you? How do you ensure that you define your own identity and community? How do you keep the positive aspects of community from devolving into the negative aspects of tribalism? How do you honor both historical traditions and multinational evolution? How does the human trait of self-imposing order define your personal community? The world is watching the American experiment. A thriving society depends on its artists and academics to identify and express the challenge and pain of cultural change and help guide us to the other side.