Top Banner
Defining “culture” and cultural anthropology Howard Culbertson Southern Nazarene University
39

and cultural anthropology - Southern Nazarene University

Dec 29, 2021

Download

Documents

dariahiddleston
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: and cultural anthropology - Southern Nazarene University

Defining “culture”and cultural anthropology

Howard CulbertsonSouthern Nazarene University

Page 2: and cultural anthropology - Southern Nazarene University

• “A few years ago I took a cultural anthropology class at a community college. This class studied people in great detail but never really mentioned what culture was. We assumed we were studying culture, but the [word culture] was never truly defined.”

• A student in Global Evangelism class

Page 3: and cultural anthropology - Southern Nazarene University

Cultural Anthropology -- an academic discipline

Page 4: and cultural anthropology - Southern Nazarene University

Cultural Anthropology -- an academic discipline

Page 5: and cultural anthropology - Southern Nazarene University

Cultural Anthropology -- an academic discipline

Page 6: and cultural anthropology - Southern Nazarene University

Cultural Anthropology -- an academic discipline

Page 7: and cultural anthropology - Southern Nazarene University

Cultural Anthropology -- an academic discipline

Page 8: and cultural anthropology - Southern Nazarene University

Culture is what makes you a stranger when you are away from home

Page 9: and cultural anthropology - Southern Nazarene University

Defining culture 1. Philip Bock – What makes you a stranger

when you’re away from home2. Ruth Benedict – learned patterns3. Charles Kraft – Complex, integrated

coping mechanism4. Bob Sjogren -- What makes us “us” and

them “them”

Page 10: and cultural anthropology - Southern Nazarene University

Viewing culture as successive levels Diagram by Lloyd Kwast

Page 11: and cultural anthropology - Southern Nazarene University
Page 12: and cultural anthropology - Southern Nazarene University
Page 13: and cultural anthropology - Southern Nazarene University
Page 14: and cultural anthropology - Southern Nazarene University
Page 15: and cultural anthropology - Southern Nazarene University
Page 16: and cultural anthropology - Southern Nazarene University
Page 17: and cultural anthropology - Southern Nazarene University
Page 18: and cultural anthropology - Southern Nazarene University

An iceberg as an analogy of culture

Page 19: and cultural anthropology - Southern Nazarene University

From Gary Weaver in Culture, Communication and Conflict: Readings in Intercultural Relations

Page 20: and cultural anthropology - Southern Nazarene University
Page 21: and cultural anthropology - Southern Nazarene University

Culture is a complex, integrated coping mechanism.

Culture consists of1. Learned concepts and behavior 2. Underlying perspectives (worldview)3. Resulting products

• nonmaterial (customs and rituals) • material (artifacts)

– Chuck Kraft’s definition

Page 22: and cultural anthropology - Southern Nazarene University

Scattered thoughts about Cultural Anthropology

• It’s holistic (as opposed to atomistic or narrow)

• It’s comparative– Etic (from outsider’s vantage point)– Emic (from an insider’s vantage point

• Perspectives run the gamut from relativism to ethnocentrism

• You will get your hands dirty (fieldwork)

Page 23: and cultural anthropology - Southern Nazarene University

• What makes up a culture?• What are those learned patterns and

behaviors?

Page 24: and cultural anthropology - Southern Nazarene University

Cultural Universals

George Murdock’s 70 cultural universals

Page 25: and cultural anthropology - Southern Nazarene University

age-gradingathletic sportsbodily adornmentcalendarcleanliness trainingcommunity organizationcookingco-operative laborcosmologycourtshipdancingdecorative artdivinationdivision of labordream interpretationeducationeschatology

ethicsethno-botanyetiquettefaith healingfamily feastingfire-makingfolklorefood taboosfuneral ritesgamesgesturesgift-givinggovernmentgreetingshair styleshospitality

housinghygieneincest taboosinheritance rulesjokingkin groupskinship nomenclaturelanguagelawluck / superstitionsmagicmarriagemealtimesmedicineobstetricspenal sanctionspersonal names

population policypostnatal carepregnancy usagesproperty rightspropitiation of supernatural beingspuberty customsreligious ritualresidence rulessexual restrictionssoul conceptsstatus differentiationsurgerytool-makingtradevisitingweather control weaving

Page 26: and cultural anthropology - Southern Nazarene University

9 cultural universals

Page 28: and cultural anthropology - Southern Nazarene University

2. Family life

Page 29: and cultural anthropology - Southern Nazarene University

3. Economics

Page 31: and cultural anthropology - Southern Nazarene University

Note: “Drives” vs. culture• Hunger is a basic human psycho-biological

drive. • How that hunger is satisfied involves all

kinds of cultural things (what is eaten, how it is prepared, how it is eaten . . .).

Page 32: and cultural anthropology - Southern Nazarene University

5. Communication

Page 33: and cultural anthropology - Southern Nazarene University

6. Government

Page 35: and cultural anthropology - Southern Nazarene University

8. Education

Page 36: and cultural anthropology - Southern Nazarene University

9. Quest for the supernatural

Page 37: and cultural anthropology - Southern Nazarene University

Sociocultural change

Page 38: and cultural anthropology - Southern Nazarene University

Is it worth my time?• Question: Why study cultural

anthropology?• Answer: To enrich a college education by

giving new insights about ourselves and our own cultural context as well as stretching our imaginations.

Page 39: and cultural anthropology - Southern Nazarene University

This PowerPoint presentation is available along with related materials and other PowerPoint presentations at http://home.snu.edu/~hculbert/ppt.htm