Transcript Chapter 2

Chapter 2
The Concept of Culture
What We Will Learn
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What do anthropologists mean by the
term culture?
How do we acquire our culture?
Despite the enormous variation in
different cultures, are some common
features found in all cultures of the
world?
Culture Defined
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Everything people have
• material possessions
Everything people think
• ideas, values, and attitudes
Everything people do
• behavior patterns
Culture
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According to the
anthropological
perspective, this
Australian aboriginal
man playing the
dijeridoo has as
much culture as
world famous cellist
Yo-Yo Ma.
Three Components of Culture
For this text, culture is defined as
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2.
3.
4.
a mental map which
guides us in relation to our
surroundings and to other
people.
that complex whole which
includes knowledge,
belief, art, morals, law,
custom, and other
capabilities and habits
acquired by man as a
member of society.
everything people have,
think, and do as members
of society.
the finer things in life.
25%
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25%
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Answer: 3
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For this text, culture is defined as
everything that people have, think, and
do as members of society.
Culture and Civilization
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Civilizations are cultures that have
developed cities.
Civilizations are characterized by
• monumental architecture
• centralized (hierarchical) governments
• fully efficient food production systems
• writing
Symbols
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The ability to symbolize is the most
fundamental aspect of culture.
Symbols help people identify, sort,and
classify things, ideas, and behaviors.
When people symbolize using language,
they can express experiences that took
place earlier or suggest events that may
happen.
Culture Is Shared
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For something to be cultural, it must have
a meaning shared by most people in a
society.
When people share a culture, they can
predict how others will behave.
When we step outside our culture,
misunderstandings can occur.
Culture is Shared
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Societies such as the
United States and
Canada are composed of
a number of subcultural
groups.
One such group in the
United States are
Ravers, who congregate
for late night or all-night
dance parties and have
their own clothing styles
and specialized
vocabulary.
Culture Shock
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A psychological disorientation
experienced when attempting to operate
in a radically different cultural
environment.
Subculture
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A subdivision of a national culture that
shares some features with the larger
society and also differs in some important
respects.
Pluralistic Societies
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Societies composed of a number of
different cultural or subcultural groups.
Culture Is Learned
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Culture is acquired through the process of
learning or interacting with one’s cultural
environment.
Acquiring culture after we are born is
called enculturation.
Learning Versus Instincts
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During the first half of the twentieth
century, psychologists and other social
scientists tended to explain human
behavior in terms of various instincts or
genetically based propensities.
Today, most social scientists support the
notion that humans are born with little
predetermined behavior.
Culture is Learned
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Children learn their
culture from their
parents and others in
their society.
Culture Is Taken for Granted
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Culture is deeply embedded in our
psyche.
How we act and what we think are often
habitual.
Monochronic and Polychronic
Culture
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Monochronic culture
• A culture whose people view time in a linear
fashion, place great importance on
punctuality and keeping on schedule, and
prefer to work on one task at a time.
Polychronic culture
• A culture in which people perform a number
of tasks at the same time and place a higher
value on nurturing and maintaining social
relationships rather than on punctuality.
Punctuality
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North Americans
place a high value on
punctuality,
schedules, and
deadlines.
Our Bodies and Culture
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This Mursi woman
from Ethiopia, with
her colorful lip and
earlobe plates,
illustrates the
principle that cultural
ideas of beauty can
affect our bodies.
Cultural Change: Two
Processes
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Internal changes (innovations) - can
spread to other cultures and occur in
societies with the greatest number of
cultural elements.
External changes (cultural diffusion) spreading of cultural elements from one
culture to another. Responsible for the
greatest amount of change in any
society.
Cultural Diffusion
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Cultural diffusion, not
independent
invention, is
responsible for the
greatest amount of
culture change in all
societies.
One of two basic processes of change, _____
refers to internal changes, the ultimate source
of all cultural changes.
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2.
3.
4.
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diffusion
biology
enculturation
innovation
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Answer: 4
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One of two basic processes of change,
innovation refers to internal changes,
the ultimate source of all cultural
changes.
A second source of cultural change is
_____, or the spread of ideas from one
culture to another.
25%
1.
2.
3.
4.
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innovation
enculturation
diffusion
biology
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2
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Answer: 3
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A second source of cultural change is
diffusion or the spread of ideas from
one culture to another.
Cultural Universals
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Although marriage
practices in Africa and
the United States differ in
many respects, both sets
of practices are
responses to the
universal need to have
an orderly system of
mating and child rearing.
Cultural Universals
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Societies share common features because they
solve problems shared by all human societies:
• Economic system
• Systems of marriage and family
• Educational system
• Social control system
• System of supernatural belief
• Systems of communication
Murdock’s Cultural Universals
Age grading
Etiquette
Inheritance
rules
Athletics
Faith
healing
Joking
Bodily
adornment
Family
Calendar
Feasting
Cleanliness
training
Fire
making
Kinship
groups
Kin
terminology
Language
Penal
sanctions
Personal
names
Population
policy
Postnatal
care
Pregnancy
usages
Murdock’s Cultural Universals
Community
organization
Folklore
Cooking
Food
taboos
Cooperative
labor
Cosmology
Funeral
rites
Games
Law
Property rights
Luck
Propitiation of
Supernatural
beings
Magic
Puberty customs
Marriage
Religious ritual
Murdock’s Cultural Universals
Cosmology
Games
Marriage
Courtship
Gestures
Mealtimes
Dancing
Gift giving
Medicine
Decorative
arts
Government
Modesty
Divination
Greetings
Mourning
Religious
ritual
Residence
rules
Sexual
restrictions
Soul
concepts
Status
differentiation
Murdock’s Cultural Universals
Division of
labor
Dream
interpretation
Ethnobotany
Incest
taboos
Penal
sanctions
Hair styles
Music
Surgery
Education
Hospitality
Mythology
Eschatology
Ethics
Housing
Hygiene
Numerals
Obstetrics
Tool
making
Trade
Weaning
Weather
control
Culture: Adaptive And
Maladaptive
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Culture is the way humans adapt to their
environments so they can survive.
The adaptive nature of culture allows people
are able to live in previously uninhabitable
places, such as deserts, the polar region, under
the sea, and outer space.
Some features of a culture may be maladaptive:
• The use of automobiles coupled with
industrial pollutants is destroying the air.
Organic Analogy
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Early functionalist idea that cultural
systems are integrated into a whole
cultural unit in much the same way that
the various parts of a biological organism
(such as a respiratory system or
circulatory system) function to maintain
the health of the organism.
Despite many differences, all cultures share a number of
common features called _____, because they have all
worked out a series of solutions to a whole range of
problems facing all human societies.
25%
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cultural universals
polytypical features
symbols
innovations
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Answer: 1
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Despite many differences, all cultures
share a number of common features
called cultural universals, because they
have all worked out a series of solutions
to a whole range of problems facing all
human societies.
Interconnectedness of the Parts
of Culture
Small-scale Societies
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A small-scale society is a society:
• with a small population
• that is technologically simple
• is usually preliterate
• has little labor specialization
• is not stratified.
Small-scale Societies
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A distinction between small-scale and
more complex societies does not imply
that societies can be pigeonholed into one
or the other category.
All societies can be viewed along a
continuum from small-scale to complex.