The world for more than a century has flocked to acquire the customs, culture and gadgetry of 'western' culture of European origins, with or without colonization. Why is it that others are drawn to Caucasian ways of life?
To be honest, Western culture is a doggoned successful culture. European culture has 99 problems, but failure to thrive is not one of them.
As I've said before, we American descendants of slavery were stripped of our various African cultures and were both taught and exposed to a broken form of Anglo-American culture. It's "broken" because we were exposed to a culture that we were not fully allowed to adopt. For instance, slaves could not practice Anglo marriage. An enslaved woman could not devote herself to being mother and nurturer of her own family; an enslaved man could not be the provider and protector of her family. Yet, in Anglo-American culture, those were the primary goals and indicators of fully attained masculinity and femininity. Marriage between slaves wasn't even legally recognized. Enslaved men and women were usually not allowed to select their mates, enslaved mothers were frequently not able to keep their own children. After three hundred years of that, of course African American practice of marriage would be weakened, and concepts of masculinity and femininity would be distorted.
The enslaved were usually not allowed to read and write, which was a primary method of the transfer of Anglo-American culture. The enslaved could not practice planning for the future, either their personal future or their future generations. They had day-to-day lives with no idea what would happen to them in the future. Any day, they could sold.
The lives of enslaved people were cheap. They could not value themselves or each other...they were only the value of property, and could be killed at will by their masters. By Supreme Court judgment, no black man had any rights that any white man was obligated to respect.
That is a broken culture, and the effects continue to he seen.
African-American culture has, however, never been monolithic, although it has tended to be aspirational to the Anglo-American culture that has been the only model we have had (and certainly the most successful model we could observe). It has varied in broad levels in how it has emulated Anglo-American culture to the extent allowed by the majority group, as well as which Anglo-American culture broad groups of black people were exposed to and thus emulated.
In the early centuries, there was a freedman culture of the northeast that was aspirational to northeast Anglo-American culture. Enslaved people in the southern Atlantic coast aspirationally emulated the England-based culture of their aristocratic white slaveowners in that area.
However, the enslaved of the Gulf Coast states had no choice but to emulate the decidedly more vulgar Scots-Irish slaveholder culture they were exposed to, and that turned out to be the greatest proportion of enslaved people.
During the Great Northern Migration during the early 20th century, the cultural difference between blacks who had emulated the Scots-Irish slaveholders of the Gulf States and those who had emulated Northerners or South Atlantic aristocrats was plain to see. It was visible into the 1980s, by which time the popular media had shifted from portraying blacks as the aspirational culture (as seen in the movie Hidden Figures and as represented in the Civil Rights Era) to portraying blacks as the urban ghetto...which actually represents the blacks of the Great Northern Migration of the Scots-Irish culture.
I had come to a conclusion decades ago (beginning in the early 60s, actually) that I've only recently learned is the opinion of Thomas Sowell: What we are shown as "black culture" (and both blacks and whites have bought into this) is really black "cracker" or "peckerwood" culture....and it was learned from white "crackers" and "peckerwoods" of the Gulf States. Up until the 70s into the 80s, other black people--those raised in the South or North Atlantic cultures, had abhorred that culture--just as their white counterparts did. But the reason you don't see those blacks represented in the media is because those blacks have assimilated. They don't stand out as a separate culture as they did prior to the Civil Rights Era, by which they were visible because they were segregated.