Dominant narrative can be used to describe the lens in which history is told by the perspective of the dominant culture.
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Dominant narrative can be used to describe the lens in which history is told by the perspective of the dominant culture.
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Dominant narrative can refer to multiple aspects of life, such as history, politics, or different activist groups.
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Dominant narrative can be defined and decided by the sociopolitical and socioeconomic setting someone lives his or her life in.
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Dominant narrative is similar in some ways to the ideas of metanarrative or grand narrative.
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The dominant narrative are those that take part in and benefit from being associated with the dominant culture.
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Since the dominant narrative is accepted as the norm this, therefore, means those not in the dominant narrative are abnormal.
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Someone's Dominant narrative and perceived Dominant narrative can greatly affect how someone views themselves and relates to themselves.
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Dominant narrative can be seen in almost any aspect of life from media, history, advertising, and activism.
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Dominant historical narrative exists in US portrayal of Indigenous peoples pre-European contact.
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Proponents of the counter Dominant narrative argue that, through education, cinema, and media, the American society portrays indigenous peoples as far less civilized than their European colonizers.
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People who do not fit into the dominant narrative can be written out of activist movements, and in turn written out of history later on.
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