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Culture

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Title: Culture


1
Chapter 3
  • Culture

2
Chapter Outline
  • Dimensions of Culture
  • Language and Culture
  • Cultural Diversity
  • Cultural Similarity
  • Ethnocentrism Versus Cultural Relativism
  • Culture, Society, and Heredity

3
Culture and Society
  • Culture consists of material objects, patterns of
    thinking, feeling, and behaving passed from
    generation to generation. A peoples way of life
    that is passed on generationally.
  • A society is a group of people living within
    defined territorial borders who share a culture.
  • Culture provides the blueprints for guiding
    people in their relationships within a society.

4
Questions for Consideration
  • What are the dimensions of culture discussed in
    this video? Are they similar or different from
    what Shepard identifies?
  • How has change impacted our culture?
  • How is material culture different than
    nonmaterial culture?

5
Three Dimensions of Culture
  • Normative - composed of norms, sanctions, and
    values.
  • Cognitive - language, beliefs
  • Material - concrete, tangible aspects of a
    culture

6
Norms
  • Rules defining appropriate and inappropriate ways
    of behaving.
  • Rules that guide behavior.
  • Change throughout time and from culture to
    culture.
  • Help explain why people in a society or group
    behave similarly in similar circumstances.

7
Premarital Sexual Experience Among Teen Women in
the U.S.
8
Questions for Consideration
  • The previous slide shows the change in the
    reported premarital experience among teenage
    women in the U.S. What questions might you pose
    as you apply information from the previous
    chapter to this table?
  • From a cultural context, what might explain
    the rise and fall of this trend?

9
Types of Norms
  1. Folkways rules that cover customary ways of
    thinking, feeling, and behaving. Norms that have
    little or no moral significance. If they are not
    followed, the sanctions are very minor (e.g., use
    of a cell phone in a restaurant, or in class).
  2. Mores (MOR-ays) norms/rules with great moral
    significance. Seen as vital to the well-being of
    society. Violation will evoke strong disapproval.

10
Types of Norms Cont.
  • Taboos are a type of more that is extremely
    serious incest taboo, canibalism, etc. These are
    actions where the mere thought of them disgusts
    people in that society.
  • Laws norms that are formally defined and
    enforced by officials. They are consciously
    created and enforced. Mores are an important
    source of laws.

11
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12
Enforcement of Norms
  • Sanctionsrewards and punishments used to
    encourage conformity to norms (informal and
    formal).
  • Formal sanctions given only by officially
    designated persons (e.g., an A for academic
    performance time in jail/prison for committing
    fraud)
  • Informal sanctions can be applied by most
    members of society (e.g., thanking someone for
    helping you change a tire)

13
What are Values?
  • Values broad cultural principles that most
    people in a society consider desirable.
  • They do not specify precisely what to think,
    feel, or behave. Rather, they are ideas about
    what a group of people believe is good/bad,
    acceptable/unacceptable, etc.
  • They are important because they have a tremendous
    influence on social behavior.
  • Norms are based on a cultures values.

14
American Values
  • Achievement and success
  • Activity and work
  • Efficiency and practicality
  • Equality
  • Democracy
  • Group Superiority (racial, ethnic, religious)

15
Cognitive Dimension
  • The cognitive dimension of culture refers to a
    cultures construction of ideas and knowledge.
  • Material culture concrete tangible objects
    within a culture (e.g., automobiles, basketballs,
    jewelry). Artifacts that have no meaning or use
    apart from the meanings people give them.
  • Physical objects do not have the same meanings
    and uses in all societies.

16
Ideal and Real Culture
  • Ideal culture cultural guidelines publicly
    embraced by members of a society (those we claim
    to accept)
  • Real culture actual behavior patterns exhibited
    by members of a society

17
Language and Culture
  • The creation and transmission of culture depends
    heavily on the capacity to develop symbols.
  • Symbols signs with meaning things that stand
    for, or represent, something else. Can also
    include gestures (e.g., a hand wave).
  • Language a system of interrelated symbols
    through which a group of people are able to
    communicate and pass down information.

18
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19
Questions for Consideration
  • Why are both columns called symbols?
  • How easy is it to learn these emoticons?
  • What thoughts and feelings are elicited when you
    receive communication with an emoticon and you do
    not know what it stands for?

20
Sapir-Whorf Hypothesis
  • This hypothesis is known as the hypothesis of
    linguistic relativity.
  • Our perception of reality is at the mercy of the
    words and grammatical rules of our language.
  • Language shapes our reality.
  • Studies demonstrate that language significantly
    shapes thought.

21
Questions for Consideration
  • How does learning a new language shape ones view
    of the world?
  • What is meant by the statement that people are
    forever prisoners of their language?
  • What are some ways that you can apply the
    Sapir-Whorf hypothesis?

22
Cultural Diversity
  • Because humans are basically the same
    biologically, cultural diversity must be
    explained by nongenetic factors.
  • Cultural diversity within societies is promoted
    by social categories, subcultures, and
    countercultures.

23
Subcultures
  • Subcultures a group that is part of the
    dominant culture but differs from it in some
    important respects.
  • By tradition, Americans like to see themselves as
    part of a large, single culture. Yet there are
    many subgroups with cultural uniqueness.
  • What are examples of subcultures in the U.S.?

24
Subcultures Southern Appalachia
  • According to sociologists in the 1960s
  • Southern Appalachians are fatalistic, present
    oriented, unambitious, and nonparticipative.
  • This subculture is a cultural adaptation to
    living a long-standing deprived and frustrating
    existence.

25
Countercultures
  • A subculture that is deliberately and consciously
    opposed to aspects of the dominant culture.
  • Openly defies norms, values, and/or beliefs of
    the dominant culture.
  • Rebelling against the dominant culture is central
    to their members.
  • Examples
  • militia movement, skinheads, hippies

26
Ethnocentrism
  • The tendency to judge other individuals or
    cultures based on ones own cultural standards.
  • This moves beyond race and ethnicity.
  • Taken to an extreme end, can result in
    feelings of superiority of ones group over
    others.
  • A belief that your groups way is the best and
    normal way to do things, see the world, etc.

27
Culture Shock
  • Defined as the psychological and social stress we
    may experience when confronted with a radically
    different cultural environment.
  • This can be experienced when going to a different
    country that one has never experienced, but also
    when moving from one familiar cultural group
    (grade school) to an unfamiliar group (high
    school).

28
Questions for Consideration
  • How does culture shock affect individuals?
  • What are some instances where you have
    experienced culture shock?

29
Cultural Relativism
  • Evaluating another persons or groups behaviors,
    thoughts, etc. based on that cultures standards,
    not ones own.
  • This perspective also states values, norms,
    beliefs, and attitudes are not in themselves
    correct or incorrect they simply exist within
    the total cultural framework of a people and
    should be evaluated in relation to their place
    within the larger cultural context of which they
    are a part.

30
Application of Cultural Relativism
  • Consider the novel excerpt provided in your text
    regarding Rueschs novel about an Eskimos rage
    that caused him to accidentally kill a guest who
    refused to have sexual relations with his wife.
  • How does this norm fit with Eskimo culture?
  • By applying cultural relativism in this case,
    does that require that you accept another
    cultures norms and practices?

31
Cultural Similarity
  • Although there are many differences between
    groups throughout the world, sociologists and
    anthropologists have identified many behaviors
    that are shared by all cultures.
  • All cultures have families, schools, houses of
    worship, economies, governments, and systems of
    prestige.

32
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33
Questions for Consideration
  • Do you think that the data support the existence
    of cultural diversity or cultural similarity?
    Explain.
  • Are you surprised by any of these rankings? Which
    ones and why?

34
Cultural Universals
  • General cultural traits that exist in all known
    societies.
  • Although found in all societies, their expression
    varies among societies.
  • Reasons for cultural universals
  • Biological similarity of humans
  • Common limitations of the physical environment
  • Common problems of sustaining social life

35
Cultural Universals
36
Culture and Heredity
  • Humans do not have instincts human behavior is
    learned.
  • Genetically inherited drives do not determine how
    humans behave, because people are heavily
    influenced by culture.
  • If we were controlled by instincts, we would
    pretty much all behave the same way (e.g., if
    women had an instinct for mothering, then all
    women would want children).

37
Sociobiology
  • Sociobiology is the study of the biological basis
    of human behavior.
  • Sociobiologists argue that physical
    characteristics, human social behavior is shaped
    through the evolutionary process.
  • The application of Darwinian natural selection to
    human social behavior.

38
Questions for Consideration
  • How might functionalists and conflict theorists
    have different views of countercultures? Which
    view do you prefer and why?
  • What can be done to minimize our tendencies of
    ethnocentrism?
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