The answer is C. present; first-person
<span>A. cultural diversity and its interaction with outsiders.</span>
In the context of symbolic interactionism, it the study of human conduct and human life. How one’s social life is formed and is being described by one’s perspective of self and others –community, society and etc. In this approach, these 3 views were asserted by Herbert Blumer (1969) as follows:
<span><span>1. </span>People act on a specific object based on how they see or construe it according to their outlook and attribution on the object.</span> <span><span>
2. </span>These certain outlooks and attribution that has been formed by an individual is shaped and reinforced by the people this individual is exposed to.</span> <span><span>
3. </span>These outlooks and attribution are continuously changed and altered based on one’s social environment.<span>
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I believe C is your answer.
Other people can see our identies be ofcause how we talk, act, or what we do around a person. Text, emails, and phone calls are a big part, because if a random person were to go through all of our social texts, they would probably discorver a big part of us. We influence others and make them have opinions about us by the way we talk, or act towards them. Body language, eye contact, and acting interested. How we talk, what we do, our actions make people have "thoughts" and opinions about us. They can see a big part of us, which is our identity. Our personality.
~Deceptiøn