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Technology and Culture

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Title: Technology and Culture


1
Technology and Culture
  • Going beyond
  • Modern Technology and Western Culture

2
What is Culture?
  • One of the most complicated words in English
  • Worship reverential homage. rare.
  • The action or practice of cultivating the soil
    tillage, husbandry, as in agriculture also the
    artificial development of microscopic organisms,
    esp. bacteria, in specially prepared media.
  • The cultivating or development (of the mind,
    body, faculties, manners, etc.) improvement or
    refinement by education and training.
  • The intellectual side of civilization.

3
The intellectual side of civilization.
  • The great men of culture are those who have had a
    passion for carrying from one end of society to
    the other, the best knowledge, the best ideas of
    their time -- Matthew Arnold (1869).
  • Also, the civilization, customs, artistic
    achievements, etc., of a people, esp. at a
    certain stage of its development or history.

4
Everyday life
  • Probably the word culture should be employed to
    define the collective and tangible outcome
    (pot-making, house-planning, tomb-building) of
    the material and spiritual traditions of a group
    of people.
  • By culture is meant the whole complex of
    learned behaviour, the traditions and techniques
    and the material possessions, the language and
    other symbolism, of some body of people.

5
More Definitions
  • Culture or civilization taken in its wide
    ethnographic sense, is that complex whole which
    includes knowledge, belief, art, morals, law,
    custom, and any other capabilities and habits
    acquired by man as a member of society Edward
    Tylor, 1871.
  • A web of significance within a group or society,
    that is a public creation that controls and
    completes the individual Clifford Geertz, 1973.
  • The code or mode of communication within a
    society that dominates, as well as the symbolic
    and political boundary between self and other
    Lamont and Fournier, 1992.
  • All that humans learn Evelyn Jacob, 1992.

6
The Two Cultures (Snow)
  • 1959 Two Cultures Sci. Revol. Those in the two
    cultures can't talk to each other very little of
    twentieth-century science has been assimilated
    into twentieth-century art.
  • 1961 The lack of communication between scientists
    and non-scientists, which has been so much
    discussed recently in terms of the two cultures.

7
Technology and Culture
  • Historically situated artifacts are learned as
    part of membership in communities of practice.
  • Technologies are powerful webs of artifacts that
    may link thousands of communities and span highly
    complex boundaries.
  • Anthropology, psychology and sociology of science
    seek to ground activities previously seen as
    individual, mental and non-social as situated,
    collective and historically specific.
  • Material culture.
  • People often cannot see what they take for
    granted until they encounter someone who does not
    take it for granted. Anthropologists call this
    the naturalization of categories or objects. The
    more at home you are in a community of practice,
    the more you forget the strange and contingent
    nature of its categories seen from the outside.

8
  • culture vulture, a rhyming collocation indicating
    a person who is voracious for culture.
  • (outward seeking)
  • culture-bound, restricted in character, outlook,
    etc. by belonging to a particular culture
    determined or limited by the presuppositions of
    one's culture. He is culture-bound in his
    desires as well as his activities -- R. Firth
    (1951). (inward looking)

9
Architecture and Culture
10
600 BC, Hanging Gardens of Babylon. Nebuchadnezzar
2700-2300 BC, Great Pyramids at Giza
11
448-432 BC, The Parthenon, Athens. Iktinos and
Kallikrates, architects
12
1817 University of Virginia, Charlottesville.
Thomas Jefferson
1796-1809 Monticello, Virginia. Thomas Jefferson
13
1836-60 Houses of Parliament, LondonCharles
Barry and A.W.N. Pugin
14
1889 Eiffel Tower, Paris. Gustave Eiffel
15
1882-89 Forth Bridge, Edinburgh, Scotland.Sir
Benjamin Baker
16
Toyko Tower
17
1956-59 Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum New York,
Frank Lloyd Wright
1937 Kaufman House Fallingwater, Bear Run, PA,
Frank Lloyd Wright
18
STATA Center at MIThttp//archinect.com/gallery/t
humbnails.php?album12
19
Traditional Cultures
20
TRADITIONAL CULTUREKwakwaka'wakw basket fish
trap, Nahwitti area (north Vancouver Island),
c. 1900.
21
JAPANESE CULTURELacquer ware
22
KOTA Reliquary Figure, GabonWood, copper, and
brass
AFRICAN CULTURE Bowl with Figures Yoruba, 1925,
by Olowe of Ise, wood, pigment
23
Popular culture
  • popular culture n. the cultural traditions of the
    ordinary people of a particular community (now)
    esp. pop culture
  • 1854 The Newspaper Press is destined to be the
    chief instrument of popular culture.
  • 1966 Popular culture, which..is to be sharply
    distinguished from commercialized pop culture
    is the style of life of the majority of the
    members of a community.
  • 1996 Imagine your poem being judged by that most
    ruthless arbiter of popular culture the
    clapometer.

24
California is a car culture. You won't survive
for long without a car in California --
California was designed for cars...
25
Or NASCAR Sub-Culture
26
Sub-culture
  • Sub-culture. A group or class of lesser
    importance or size sharing specific beliefs,
    interests, or values which may be at variance
    with those of the general culture of which it
    forms part.
  • The total culture of a society is really an
    aggregate of sub-cultures.

27
Class and Race
28
Spy Culture
Digital National Security Archive 'Trial
Databases'. http//0-nsarchive.chadwyck.com.libr
ary.colby.edu/
29
Dadaism ("da-da") 1920s nihilistic movement in
the arts, a reaction to the Great War,
emphasizing the absurdity of modern life, disgust
with modern civilization, complete break with
tradition, systematic destruction of culture,
surrealism, graffiti, and the complete
elimination of the meaning of words in favor of
their sounds, with comic effects through the
piling up of nonsense. Revival in 1960s, 1980s
punk and techno music movements.
30
Culture and Science
  • As long as our culture continues to refract
    reality through the lens of science there is an
    obligation to make the science accessible to
    everyone What is at state here is not just
    individual sanity, but ultimately social
    cohesion. By binding people into the same
    cosmological framework, a shared world picture
    becomes one of the primary glues that holds
    communities together Margaret Wertheim, 1995.
  • Our intellectual work and the ways in which we
    can make a society conscious of itself are very
    much a part of that society and situated in
    institutional contexts we did not make, though we
    are working to be part of their remaking Dorothy
    Smith, 1987.
  • Cultural centers museums, architectures,
    institutions.
  • National Air and Space Museum we are a
    space-faring nation
  • Colby Museum of Art we are a college that
    values the arts
  • Creation Museum The Bible is the infallible
    guide to science
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