Transcript Culture

Culture

What do people mean when they say: “You are cultured”?

Culture

   All the shared products of a human group. Includes physical objects, beliefs, values, and behaviors.

Methods by which collections of people deal with their environment.

   Material Culture: the physical objects that people create.

Nonmaterial Culture: abstract human creations. Society: group of mutually interdependent people who have organized in a way to share a common culture.

Components of Culture

   Culture is learned and shared. Specific components vary among societies and changes occur over time.

Culture Lag: when nonmaterial culture can’t keep up with material culture.

  Symbols: stands for something else - shared meaning attached to it.

Language: organization of written or spoken symbols into a standardized system.

Components continued…

  Values: shared beliefs about what is good or bad, right or wrong, desirable or undesirable, beautiful or ugly. Norms: the shared rules of conduct that tell people how to act in specific situations (expectations) based on a community’s shared values.  Based on who and where the individual is.

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American Value System

Certain values are shared by the majority of Americans. Value Cluster: values that fit together to form a larger whole.

Value Contradiction: to follow one, means you Value systems change due to various social factors, which leads to value conflicts as some values change over time. must given up another

Some American Values

 Certain values are shared by the majority of Americans:         Personal Achievement/Success Work Morality Humanitarianism Efficiency Practicality Material Comfort Equity             Democracy Freedom Self-Fulfillment Leisure Physical Fitness Youthfulness Environmental Concerns Individualism Science/Technology Education Religiosity Romantic Love

  One who breaks the norms = deviant.

Some people are expected to behave in certain ways based on their specific role.

Norms more in depth…

 Folkways: them (the norms that do not have great moral significance attached to etiquette and customs of a people that are not of critical importance to the society). • Mores: have great moral significance attached to them (violation of them endangers the well-being and stability of society). • Taboo: a norm so strong that it often brings revulsion if violated.

What makes people in society conform to norms?

   Social Control: enforced.

means by which social norms are upheld and Internalization: belief that the norm is good, useful or appropriate - becomes part of an individual’s personality.

Sanctions: rewards or punishments that a society sets up to enforce the norms.

    Positive: reward or positive reaction Negative: expression of disapproval for breaking a norm Physical or Psychological Formal vs. Informal

Sanctions continued…

  Psychological: address the feelings and emotions of a person.

Informal: unwritten and based on personal relations and public opinion.

Moral Holiday: specified times when people are allowed to break a norm Moral Holiday Place: locations where norms are expected to be broken

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Urinal Behavior Quiz

5 Number the Urinals from left to right 1-5.

Following the scenario given, describe the proper etiquette and why… boys only on this one.

Girls, think about our bathrooms

  List the expected etiquette/rules you have learned/follow when using an elevator.

Be sure to explain why that is proper behvior

Elevator Rules

Variation among and within Society

   Culture Shock: us.

disorientation experienced when we cannot make sense of the world when our nonmaterial culture “fails” Ethnocentrism: the tendency to view one’s own culture and group as superior to others.

Cultural Relativism: society.

 cultures should be judged by their own standards of their own culture - viewed from the point of view of the members of that Is there such thing as “normal” and “abnormal” when looking at differences in culture?

   Subculture: a group in society that shares values, norms, and behaviors that are not shared by the entire population.

Contra culture: culture.

subcultures whose values (outlaw motorcyclists) or activities and goals (terrorists) conflict with mainstream Counterculture: set of cultural a group that rejects the values, norms, and practices of the larger society and replaces them with a new patterns/practices.

Cultural Diversity and Universals

Cultural Diversity

   If humans all have the same basic needs, how can cultures be so different?

Cultural Diffusion: the spread of cultural characteristics from one group to another.

Cultural Leveling: process by which cultures become similar to one another.

Cultural Universals

 Some needs are so basic that all societies must develop ways to   ensure their fulfillment.

However human beings have the ability to meet these needs in a vast number of ways.

Example - survival => need to care for young => families.  But are all families the same?

  Things people attach meaning to (usually nonmaterial) that they use to communicate.

Gestures:  using one’s body to communicate (meanings might change from one culture to the other) Some gestures are biological.

Symbolic Culture

 Language: organization of written or spoken symbols into a standardized system.     Provide deeper understanding of what we are communicating Represents objects and abstract thought.

Emoticons: “written gestures” for expressing yourself online http://pc.net/emoticon s/

Language Continued

    Allows culture to develop – move beyond immediate experiences.

Provides a social or shared past and future – understand past events (times, dates, places).

Allows for shared perspectives – form a shared understanding that forms the basis of social life  Not sharing a language while living alongside one another, invites miscommunication and suspicion.

Allows complex, shared, and goal-directed behaviors – establish purpose.

Sapir-Whorf Hypothesis

 Language creates ways of thinking and perceiving (rather than objects)  In the United States we have learned to classify people (with given titles) – jocks, goths, stoners, skaters, preps, etc.  Because of that we will perceive people in an entirely different way from someone who does not know these classifications.

Gesture Quiz