Title: Culture Change
1Culture Change
2Cultural change
- No culture remains unchanged
- Societies continually experience cultural change
a both material and non-material levels
3Changes in Technology continue to shape the
material culture of a society.
- Most technological changes are primarily
modifications of existing technologies, new
technologies are changes that make a significant
difference in many peoples - lives.
4Culture change is a process.
- Cultures change in three ways
- Discovery
- Invention
- Diffusion
5Discovery
- is the process of learning about something
previously unknown or recognized.
6Early discoveries
- Fire provided light, warmth, and more tasty,
tender food 250,000 years ago - Firing of clay to make it hard around 7000BC
7- Earth revolving around the sun (Galileo Galilei
1632) - 1928 Discovery of penicillin by Alex. Fleming
8Many discoveries today come from scientific
research
- Polio vaccination virtually eliminated
childhood disease - Modern medical technology has increased our life
expectancy these innovations have made us aware
of the importance of a healthy lifestyle through
better diets and regular exercise
9As more discoveries have occurred, people have
been able to reconfigure existing material and
nonmaterial cultural items through invention.
10Invention
- is the process of reshaping existing cultural
items into a new form. - Guns Gunpowder from arrows
- Telephone
- Light bulbs
- Flight
11- 1450 The Guttenburg printing press changed the
way and the speed that people spread information
12How did books get written before the printing
press?
- They were transcribed by hand!! Ouch!!
- Therefore they only produced books that were
guaranteed best sellers. - What was the best seller in 1455?
- The Bible
13Diffusion
- is the transmission of cultural items or social
practices from one group or society to another
14How does diffusion occur?
- Exploration
- Military Endeavors
- Media
- Tourism
- Immigration
15- Some parts of culture are more likely to be
diffused than others. - Items of material culture are more likely
candidates for diffusion than ideas or behavior
patterns
16Once a cultural element is accepted in a new
culture, it may change in form or function.
- Example Piñatas brought to Europe by Marco
Polo from China in the 12c. It was used in china
to celebrate the harvest seasons.
17- In Italy the nobles filled them with costly
gifts and played a game - In Spain It became part of the Christian Lenten
tradition - In Mexico it was used to celebrate the birth of
the Aztec god Huitzilopochtli
18- Today children in many countries have a great
time hitting piñatas with sticks at parties
when it breaks open candy and/or toys fall out
for all the children.
19There is some resistance to diffusion
France bids Adieu to E-mail PARIS, July 18,
2003-- Goodbye "e-mail," the French government
says, and hello "courriel" the term that
linguistically sensitive France is now using to
refer to electronic mail in official documents.
The Culture Ministry has announced a ban on the
use of "e-mail" in all government ministries,
documents, publications or websites, the latest
step to stem an incursion of English words into
the French lexicon.
20Other causes of culture change
- Pressures arising from
- Political Ideas Monarchy/Democracy/Communism
- Environmental Concerns Global Warming
Sustainable Development - Health Concerns - longer life expectancy means
healthier lifestyles - SARS HIV/AIDS - Social Issues Civil Rights Movement Feminism
- Gay Marriages - Equality for all (Declaration
of Human Rights is an invention)
21Cultural Lag
- a gap between the technical development of a
society and its moral and legal institutions. - This happens when material culture changes faster
than nonmaterial culture, and it creates a lag
(space) between the two cultural components.
22- Ex. Material culture computers and electronic
coding have made it possible to create a unique
health identifier for each person in Canada.
This would enable us to make a data base that
included everyones individual medical records
from birth to death it could be used by health
providers (hospitals doctors) and insurance
companies to transfer medical records anywhere
quickly.
23But
- The available technology does not mean that it
will be accepted by the people who believe
(non-material culture) that such a national data
bank would be an invasion of privacy that could
be abused by others.
24Cultural Lag is also when
- one generation of the culture may adapt to change
quickly while another does not (computers, mp3
players, ipods, email, blogging, cell phones,
text messaging, web chatting most young people
have mastered this technology while their
parents/guardians/grandparents are unable to
operate or understand this technology)
25In todays shrinking globe or global village
cultural diffusion moves at a very fast pace as
countries continually seek new markets for their
products.
- Euro Disney
- Disney Japan
- McDonalds in Moscow Tokyo
- Stuff in general
26Cultural Diffusion or Cultural Confusion?
- The Global Marketing Hall of Shame
27Coca-Cola
- Launching their drink in China, found a phrase
that sounded perfect - Ko-kou-ke-la. After printing many signs, the
masterminds at Coke discovered they had names
their drink - Bite the wax tadtole
28Ford
- Faced several problems in playing the name game
- Pinto in Brazil is slang for tiny male
genitals - They later changed the name to Corcel
- Meaning Horse
29 Kentucky Fried Chicken
- Finger Lickin Good
- In China
- Eat your fingers off
30Chevy
- Nova
- In South America no va
- means
- it wont go in Spanish
31Pepsi
- Come alive with the Pepsi Generation
- Translated into Taiwanese as
- Pepsi will bring your ancestors back from the
dead.
32Coors Light Beer
- Promotion aimed at Hispanics in the United States
with the slogan Turn it Loose - Translated into Spanish
- Drink Coors and get diarrea.
33- Coca-Cola introduced 2 litre bottles in Japan,
but was unaware the few Japanese refrigerators
were big enough to hold the bottle - In the 1960s Betty Crocker tried to market its
cake mixes in Japan most Japanese homes did not
have an oven
34- When McDonalds ventured into china the
corporate mascot Ronald McDonald was at the
launch, but to the Chinese, the clown is symbol
of death - A toothpaste company ran a commercial in
Southeast Asia claiming its product would whiten
teeth.problem - the target market were in the habit of chewing
betel nut in order to achieve darkly stained
teeth a sign of social prestige