Title: Chapter Two Culture
1Chapter TwoCulture
Society, The Basics 9th Edition John J. Macionis
2What is Culture?
- Culture the values, beliefs, behavior, and
material objects that form a peoples way of life
Only humans rely on culture rather than instinct
to ensure survival.
3What is Culture?
- Nonmaterial culture ideas created by members of
a society.
- Material culture tangible things created by
members of a society.
4What is Culture?
- Society refers to people who interact in a
defined territory and share culture.
- Culture shock refers to personal disorientation
when experiencing an unfamiliar way of life.
5The Elements of Culture
- Although cultures vary, they all have five common
components - (1) Symbols
- (2) Language
- (3) Values Beliefs
- (4) Norms
- (5) Ideal Real
- Culture
6Elements of CultureSymbols
- Symbols anything that carries a particular
meaning recognized by people who share culture.
7Elements of CultureSymbols
- Symbols collective creations
- General Marketing
- Aimed at a total population
- Segmented Marketing
- Aimed at a specific population
8Human Languages A Variety of SymbolsHere the
single English word Read is written in twelve
of the hundreds of languages humans use to
communicate with one another.Figure 2.1 (p. 46)
9Elements of CultureLanguage
- Language a system of symbols that allows people
to communicate with one another. - Language allows for the continuity of culture.
BBC
10Elements of CultureLanguage
- Cultural transmission the process by which one
generation passes culture to the next. - Every society transmits culture through speech.
11The Sapir-Whorf Thesis
- Languages are not just different sets of labels
for the same reality. - All languages fuse symbols with distinctive
emotions. - The Sapir-Whorf Thesis people perceive the
world through the cultural lens of language.
12The Sapir-Whorf Thesis
- Example
- Workman handling full barrels of gasoline very
careful with matches - Workman handling empty barrels of gasoline not
very careful with matches
13The Sapir-Whorf Thesis
- Snow
- Falling
- Drifting
- Frozen
- Fresh
- Dirty
- In a cone
- Behavior
- Drive your car
- Go skiing
- Walk or play
- Eat it
- Build a snowman
14Elements of CultureValues and Beliefs
- Values culturally defined standards by which
people assess desirability, goodness, and beauty
and that serve as broad guidelines for social
living.
Values are abstract standards of goodness.
15Elements of CultureValues and Beliefs
- Beliefs specific statements that people hold to
be true.
- Beliefs are particular matters that individuals
consider true or false.
16Elements of CultureValues and Beliefs
- Husband enjoys spending time with family
- Job demands takes him away from familystress
- Options
- Quit his job
- Take family on job trips
- Compromise on both family and job demands
- Leave his family
17Elements of Culture
- Societies show significant cultural variations in
their favorite sports.
Canada Ice Hockey Jamaica Cricket
Thailand Kite flying China tai chi chuan
18Cultural Values of Selected CountriesHigher-inco
me countries are secular-rational and favor
self-expression. The cultures of lower-income
countries are more traditional and concerned with
economic survival.Source Modernization,
Cultural Change and Democracy by Ronald Inglehart
and Christian Weizel, New York Cambridge
University Press, 2005.Figure 2-2 (p. 49)
19Key Values of United States Culture
Robin M. Williams, Jr.
- Equal Opportunity
- Achievement and Success
- Material Comfort
- Activity and Work
- Practicality and Efficiency
20Key Values of United States Culture
Robin M. Williams, Jr.
- Progress
- Science
- Democracy and Free Enterprise
- Freedom
- Racism and Group Superiority
21Key Values of United States Culture
Winner Takes All Show Me a Good Loser and
Ill Show You a Loser
22Key Values of United States Culture
- What is good about our cultures strong emphasis
on winning? - Are there ways in which this value can cause
harm? - Discuss how each of you were taught the
importance of winning. - Tell how you are teaching this to children.
23Elements of CultureNorms
- Norms rules and expectations by which a society
guides the behavior of its members. - Most important norms in a culture apply
everywhere and at all times.
24Elements of CultureNorms
- Mores norms that are widely observed and have
great moral significance.
- Folkways norms for routine, casual interaction.
25Elements of CultureNorms
- Societal taboos such as
- Murder
- Treason
- Child sexual abuse
Inspire intense reactions Punishment inevitably
follows
(Right vs. wrong)
26Elements of CultureNorms
- Folkways (polite vs. rude)
- People chew quietly with mouths closed
- Accepting ones place in line
- People avoid facing each other in elevators
No written rules No one physically harmed
27Technology Culture
- Material culture also reflects a societys
technology knowledge that people use to make a
way of life in their surroundings.
28Technology and Culture
- hunting and gathering societies
- horticultural pastoralism
- agriculture
- industry
- postindustrial information technology
29Cultural Diversity
- Cultural diversity can involve social class.
- Many cultural patterns are readily accessible to
only some members of a society.
30Cultural Diversity
High culture cultural patterns that distinguish
a societys elite
- Popular culture cultural patterns that are
widespread among a population.
31Recorded Immigration to the United States, by
Region of Birth, 1891-1900 and 1991-2000
Figure 2-3
32Subcultures
- Subculture cultural patterns that set apart
some segment of societys population.
33Multiculturalism
- Multiculturalism an educational program
recognizing the cultural diversity of the United
States and promoting the equality of all cultural
traditions.
34Multiculturalism
- Afrocentrism the dominance of African cultural
patterns.
- Eurocentrism the dominance of European cultural
patterns.
35Counterculture
- Counterculture cultural patterns that rejects
and opposes those widely accepted within a
society.
36Counterculture
- Countercultures
- Hippies of the 60s
- Street Gangs
- Hare Krishna
- Extreme right-wing religious groups
37Cultural Change
- Cultural integration the close relationships
among various elements of a cultural system.
- Some elements of culture change faster than
others cultural lag.
38Cultural Change
- Cultural integration
- Examples
- Women in the workforce
- Later first marriages
- Change in family patterns
- Increased use of day care
39Cultural Change
- Cultural lag
- Examples
- Contraception
- Increased availability
- Use by adolescents
- Medical Advances
- No ability to provide higher quality of life
40Cultural Change
- Cultural changes
- New cultural elements
- Cell phones
- I-pods
- iPhones
- Diffusion
- Spread of objects from one society to another
41Life Objectives of First-Year College Students,
1969-2005Todays students are less interested in
developing a philosophy of life and more
interested in making money.Sources Astin et
al. (2002) and Pryor et al. (2005).Figure 2-3
(p. 57)
42Ethnocentrism and Cultural Relativism
- Ethnocentrism the practice of judging another
culture by the standards of ones own culture.
43Ethnocentrism and Cultural Relativism
- Cultural Relativism the practice of evaluating
a culture by that cultures own standards.
Cultural Universals
44A Global Culture
- Global economy the flow of goods
- Global communication the flow of information
- Global migration the flow of people
45The View from Down UnderNorth American should
be up and South America down, or so we think.
But because we live on a globe, up and down
have no meaning at all. The reason this map of
the Western Hemisphere looks wrong to us is not
that it is geographically inaccurate it simply
violates our ethnocentric assumption that the
United States should be above the rest of the
Americas. Figure 2-4 (p. 59)
46Theoretical Analysis of Culture
- The structuralfunctional paradigm depicts
culture as a complex strategy for meeting human
needs. - The socialconflict paradigm suggests that many
cultural traits function to the advantage of some
and the disadvantage of others. - Sociobiology explores ways in which human biology
affects how we create culture.
47Applying Theory Culture (p. 61)