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Culture

Brainstorm: What do you consider culture?

Physical aspects (Materialist) (Tangible, Observable) Objects Actions

Mental aspects (Idealist) (Intangible) Thoughts Beliefs Values Inventions Rules

What is Culture?
Culture

Socially transmitted knowledge shared by some group of people Everything that people have, think, and do as members of society. The non-biological means of human adaptation. All cultures are made up of material objects, ideas, values and attitudes and patterned ways of behaving.

In 1873, Edward Tylor, sometimes called the "father of anthropology" introduced the concept of culture as an explanation of the differences among human societies
Tylor defined culture as "that complex

whole which includes knowledge, belief, art, law, morals, custom, and any other capabilities acquired by man as a member of society." He defined anthropology as the study of culture
Culture

A complex system of knowledge, values, customs and beliefs that are shared by a society

Scupins Definitions
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Culture includes tools, weapons, fire, agriculture, animal domestication, metallurgy, writing, the steam engine, glasses, airplanes, computers, penicillin, nuclear power, rock and roll, video games, designer jeans, religion, political systems, subsistence patterns, science, sports, and social organizations. Culture includes all aspects of human activity, from the fine arts to popular entertainment, from everyday behavior to the development of sophisticated technology. It contains the plans, rules, techniques, design, and policies for living. Culture is a shared way of life that includes values, beliefs, and norms transmitted within a particular society from generation to generation through symbolic learning and language. Culture is the historical accumulation of symbolic knowledge that is shared by a society. Culture is based on shared meanings that are beyond the mind of any individual; culture is also within the mind of individuals.

Made up of three interrelated elements:

Physical environment natural geography Social environment political, educational, family, class structures Training environment formal and informal socialisation

Core Elements of Culture


Culture has Normative Value: Dos

and Donts. Norms


Shared values or rules These outline acceptable behaviour of that culture Includes legal norms - laws

Values

Shared social ideals which are a reflection of social norms

Culture is group Phenomenon: Applies to

members of society. Society's normative values are binding on each member and vice versa Cultural practices are passed on from generation to generation: Society and socialisation- By interacting within a society we learn from them Primary tool for socialisation is our family Also learn from School Peer groups Media

Assumptions of Culture/Characteristics
Culture is based on symbol Symbol-something verbal or nonverbal Language is most important symbol

primary means by which culture is transmitted from one generation to another language is a symbolic replacement for meanings *i.e. symbols-wedding rings

Culture is learned
We learn what the symbols are for, not born with

cultures, we learn it from our parents, surroundings, & friends through enculturation enculturation is the process by which a society's culture is transmitted from generation to another acquiring culture after we are born, everyone acquires culture-this is enculturation Children learn about their culture through observation of their parents, teachers, friends, TV learn correct value systems and appropriate modes of behavior

Humans are the learning animals beyond all

others. We have more to learn, take longer, and learn it in more complex ways. *i.e. how did you learn to speak English or other native language? What other things have you learned without being conscious of it? Culture is Shared We share the same meanings for symbols to be a part of a culture, it's a way of thinking and interacting

results in a certain amount of regularity, predictability people can predict how others will behave But-culture does not determine behavior, does not imply we lack free will *i.e. We get confused when someone doesn't act predictably-murder, violence, dressing differently

There is variability in the sharing of

culture
a. age variation-generation gaps
b. sex variation-males and females are different c. subcultures-a system of values and beliefs that are different from main stream. There success varies from society to society

Culture is Integrated All aspects of culture function as an inter-related

whole. If one part of a culture changes it tends to affect another part. *i.e. Most American women in the 1950s expected to have domestic careers as homemakers and mothers, today college women expect to get jobs when the graduate. As women enter the work force their attitudes toward marriage, family, and children change. Also related to economic changes and families not being able to make it on one income.

Culture is Adaptive:
to both the physical & social environment culture is the primary means of human

adaptation different cultures select different ways of adapting to their particular environments Humans are the only animals that mainly depend on their culture for survival animals such as dogs, large cats get meat by using teeth, etc. while humans use weapons

Cultures are Dynamic


They are ever-changing, non-static,

referred to as cultural evolution Many cultures today are very different from what they were years ago

some aspects of culture change little but can have larger effect relationship between people and the sun mediated by culture *i.e. In early 20th century people stayed out of sun, then became "sun worshippers"

Culture change can come from outside

(domination of other culture) or inside (women entering work force)

American Indian cultures are very different from what they were 200-300 years agodue to outside forces

Culture Change by invention and

diffusion

Invention (internal)-new thing or idea. Diffusion (external)-spreading of cultural elements from one culture to another

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