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Culture Instructor: Payton Andrews
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Page 1: Lecture - Culture

Culture

Instructor: Payton Andrews

Page 2: Lecture - Culture

“The last thing a fish would ever notice would be water.”

Ralph Linton, Anthropologist

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What is Culture?

• Culture – the values, beliefs, behavior, and material objects that form a people’s way of life.

• Society – People who interact in a defined territory and share a culture.

• Nonmaterial culture – ideas created by members of a society.

• Material culture – tangible things created by members of a society.

• Only humans rely on culture rather than instinct to ensure survival.

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“Culture becomes the lens through which we perceive

and evaluate what is going on around us.”

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Structural Functionalist Perspective on Culture

• Explains culture as a complex strategy for meeting human needs

• Integrates people into groups

• Provides coherence and stability in society

• Creates norms and values to socialize people in society

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Social Conflict Perspective of Culture

• Link between culture and inequality

• Serves the interest of powerful groups (dominant elites)

• Can be a source of political resistance

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Symbolic Interaction Perspective on Culture

• Creates group identity from diverse cultural meaning systems

• Changes as people produce new cultural meaning systems

• Is socially constructed through the activities of social groups

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The Components of Culture

• Although cultures vary, they all have five common components:

(1) Symbols

(2) Language

(3) Values

(4) Beliefs

(5) Norms

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Components of Culture:Symbols

• Symbols – anything that carries a particular meaning recognized by people who share culture

• Not understanding the symbols of a culture leaves a person feeling lost and isolated

• Symbolic meaning may also vary within a single society

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Components of Culture:Language

• Language – a system of symbols that allows people to communicate with one another.

• Language allows for the continuity of culture.

• Cultural transmission – the process by which one generation passes culture to the next.

• Every society transmits culture through speech.

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Components of Culture:Values and Beliefs

• Values – culturally defined standards by which people assess desirability, goodness, and beauty and that serve as broad guidelines for social living.

• Beliefs – shared ideas that people hold to be true (stem from religion, myth, folklore, personal experience, or science).

• Values are abstract standards. • Beliefs are particular ideas that individuals

consider true or false.

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Theoretical Perspectives on Beliefs

• Structural Functionalist – beliefs are a functional component of society, integrate people into social groups

• Social conflict – beliefs present potentially competing world views with dominant elites imposing their beliefs onto others

• Symbolic Interaction – beliefs are constructed and maintained through the social interaction people have with each other

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Components of Culture: Norms• Norms – rules and expectations by which a

society guides the behavior of its members

• William Graham Sumner (1840-1910)

– Mores – norms that are widely observed and have great moral significance often upheld through rules and laws

– Folkways – norms for routine, casual interaction, ordinary customs (lighter sanctions)• Social Sanctions: consequences of

following or violating norms.

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Norms - Folkway or More? sidewalk etiquette, driving laws

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 Ethnomethodology• Technique for studying human

interaction.

• By disrupting social norms we can discover the true social order and norms become apparent.

• Culture is enforced by the social sanctions applied to those who violate the norms.

• Society exists “as if” there were no other way to do so.

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Cultural Diversity• Cultural diversity can involve social

class.• Many cultural patterns are readily

accessible to only some members of a society.

• High/Elite culture – cultural patterns that distinguish a society’s elite.

• Popular culture – cultural patterns that are widespread.– Industrialization – greater cultural

divisions between people

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Subculture• Subculture – cultural patterns that

set apart some segment of society’s population.

• Values that differ in some way.

• Almost everyone participates in many subcultures without having much commitment to any of them.

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Counter-culture• Counter-culture – cultural patterns that

strongly oppose those widely accepted within a society.

• In many cultures, counterculture is linked with youth.

• Outright rejection of various conventional ideas

• Non-conformity to the dominant culture– Hippies

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Ethnocentrism & Cultural Relativism

• Ethnocentrism

• the practice of judging another culture by the standards of one’s own culture.

• A particular culture as the basis for everyone’s reality

• Cultural Relativism• the practice of

evaluating a culture by its own standards.

• It requires critical distance and understanding unfamiliar values and norms in their social context.

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Sources of Cultural Change

1. Change in societal conditions.

2. Innovation.

3. Imposition by an outside agency (an invasion or political revolution).

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Cultural Change• Cultural lag – refers to the delay in cultural

adjustments to changing social conditions.

• Cultural shock – personal disorientation when experiencing an unfamiliar way of life.

• Global culture – the diffusion of a single culture throughout the world.

• Cultural Universals – traits that are part of every known culture– Family, Religion, Funeral rites, Jokes, Art,

Economics, Social organization, Socialization, roles/status