Culture - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 88
About This Presentation
Title:

Culture

Description:

Founded in India near Indo-Gangetic Hearth between Indus and Ganges rivers by ... Diffusion Route: spread from Indo-Gangetic Hearth eastward via the Ganges and ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:269
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 89
Provided by: kaysvillej
Category:
Tags: culture | gangetic

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Culture


1
Culture
  • Looking at its patterns and processes

2
  • Agree with Karl Popper The more we learn about
    the world, and the deeper our learning, the more
    conscious, specific, and articulate will be our
    knowledge of what we do not know.

3
Culture Introduction
  • Culture is everywhere!
  • Cultural Geography study of peoples lifestyles,
    their creations and their relationships to the
    earth and the supernatural
  • Involves both tangible and non-tangible areas of
    study
  • Example architecture and religion
  • Culture is gigantic and difficult to study!

4
Culture Basics
  • Culture defined a peoples way of life, their
    behaviors, and their shared understanding of life
  • Culture is a learned system of meaning
  • Material components of culture tangible
    artifacts that can be phsycially left behind like
    clothing and architecture
  • Nonmaterial components of culture thoughts and
    ideas of a people like religions or morals
  • Carl Sauer developed idea of cultural landscape
    (a.k.a. built environment)
  • The cultural landscape comprises the physical
    implications of human culture-where human culture
    exists, it leaves a cultural landscape as their
    unique imprint on the earth

5
Cultural Basics, cont.
  • Culture changes all the time and leaves
    historical remants all over
  • Sequent occupance defined the succession of
    different cultures
  • Example Russia where they have been conquered by
    Russians, Mongols, Muslims and Europeans and all
    left behind cultural traits
  • Cultural ecology defined the systematic study of
    human-environment interaction

6
Environmental Determinism
  • One thought that answers question Does the earth
    make humans take the actions they do.
  • Developed by Greeks and says human behavior is
    controlled by physical environment
  • Ideal climates lead to productive civilizations
  • Example ancient Egypt along the Nile or Florida
  • Harsher climates do not create productive
    cultural groups
  • Example Siberia or countries in the Sahara desert

7
Possiblism
  • Provides a counterargument to environmental
    determinism
  • Argues that natural environment places no
    restrictions on humans whatsoever!
  • Believes that restrictions humans face are placed
    on ourselves
  • Example Phoenix, Arizona
  • Political ecology takes it one step further and
    argues the government of a region affects the
    environment which in turns affects choices
    available to people in the region

8
The Layers of Culture
  • Culture trait simplest component, a single
    attribute of a culture
  • Example food, clothing, shaking of hands
  • Culture complex combination of all cultural
    traits to create a unique set of traits
  • Example American culture or Japanese culture
  • Culture systems when culture complexes share
    particular traits and they merge together
  • Example people in the South speak with different
    accent that people in the North but still share a
    the larger American culture

9
Nature of Culture
  • Conclusions Anthropologists and Historians have
    come to about the nature of culture
  • Learned, shared behavior
  • Necessary for cooperation establishes
    predictability and trust
  • Culture is irrational not internally
    consistent, nor does it consistently recommend
    the right choices
  • Defines what is real the nature of reality
  • Every society, and therefore individual, is
    influenced by multiple layers of culture.

10
Studying National Cultures
  • Four Primary Categories of Research
  • Identity A culture groups view of itself,
    comprising the traits of group character, its
    history, and future role.
  • Norms Accepted and expected modes of behavior
  • Values material goods or character traits that
    enhance status within a community
  • Perceptive Lens Beliefs (true or misinformed)
    which color the way the world is viewed.

11
Lets do an activity
12
Identity
  • American
  • What do you think here?
  • Afghan
  • Unconquerable
  • Proud of withstanding Arab (Islamic) conquest
  • Generous
  • Shrewd
  • Tribal first

13
Values Key question what traits amplify
status in this society?
  • American
  • Human do-ings
  • Status awarded according to measurable
    accomplishments. Achievement oriented.
  • Self reliant
  • Cant imagine fate worse than being dependent
  • Equality
  • Informal personal style
  • Cannot understand how people can comprehend and
    reject
  • Individualism
  • Own opinions, and experience are primary source
    of information
  • Trained to make choices very young
  • Faith in the individual
  • Solitary
  • See consequences in terms of the individual
  • Tend to overestimate attractiveness of
    individualism as a basis for society

14
Values
  • Afgan
  • Generosity, hospitality
  • Courage
  • Damaged in the war with the Soviets
  • Honor based society
  • Kill me but dont put me out in the sun.
  • Protection of the tribes
  • Mix of ascriptive and achievement orientation

15
Norms Accepted and expected modes of behavior
  • American
  • Ahistorical
  • History is more or less bunk. Henry Ford
  • Believe in human control of events
  • Purpose of human activity is problem solving
  • Anticipate problems and prepare
  • Effort optimism
  • Believe that success achieved by hard work
  • Through effort one will achieve ones ambitions.
    No goal is too remote, no obstacle too difficult
    for the individual who has the determination to
    expend the effort. Hard work is rewarded by
    success Stewart and Bennet
  • My most valuable secret? Im going to outwork
    you. Pat Summit

16
Norms
  • American cont
  • Action Oriented
  • Prefer to do than to contemplate
  • Comfortable with trial and error as a learning
    method
  • Compartmentalize others this way
  • Impatience
  • Preferred problem solving device Technology
  • Believe most problems have a technical solution
  • Enjoy novelty and material change
  • Low Context communication style
  • Generally mean what we say
  • Tend to miss cues from High Context societies

17
Norms
  • Afghan
  • Communication
  • High context rather than low context
  • Shrewd lying an accepted mode of communication
    (also poetic exaggeration)
  • Hospitality, protection of guests
  • Superiors play the role of host
  • Blood relationships carry profound weight
  • Who is he to you?
  • corruption
  • Leadership
  • Personal power base trumps rule of law
  • Expected to extract wealth and disperse (plunder,
    tribute or subsidy).

18
Norms
  • Afghan cont
  • Bride price
  • Tribal, rather than central organization
  • Armies, in Afghanistan, are personal affairs.
    p. 18
  • Defeat great powers by dissolving

19
Perceptive Lens
  • American
  • Overemphasis on human similarity
  • Linear view of time
  • Focus on the near future.
  • Deadlines rule.
  • Thinking Style
  • Causal chains (analysis)
  • Implied Agent
  • Dichotomies
  • Tendency to simplify to one good reason
  • It is human nature to want a democratic and
    capitalistic system
  • Worlds problems are economic

20
Perceptive Lens
  • Afghan
  • Post traumatic stress syndrome
  • Susceptible to fear
  • Strong practical, rather than ideological
    orientation
  • Foreigners control everything incompetence
    never the explanation
  • Taliban will stay, US will go
  • Deeply fear return of chaos
  • Suspicious of Pakistan

21
Culture Regions and Realms
  • We already learned formal, functional and
    perceptual regions-there is another type,
    cultural regions
  • Culture region defined drawn around places and
    peoples with similariteis in their culture
    systems
  • Becomes more a question of perspective than
    anything else!
  • Culture realm defined merging together of
    culture regions
  • People typically feel a sense of emotional
    attachment to particular regions leading to
    regional identities
  • Regional identities often lead to perceptual
    regions
  • Example People from Texas consider themselves
    from the Southwest but people from California
    consider Texans to be southern

22
Perceptual Regions in U.S.
23
World Perceptual Regions
24
Cultural Diffusion
  • Cultural diffusion defined spread of peoples
    culture across space
  • Two categories of diffusion exist
  • Expansion diffusion cultural component spreads
    outward to new places while remaining strong in
    its original hearth
  • Relocation diffusion actual movement of orignial
    adopters from their point of origin (hearth) to a
    new place
  • Spatial diffusion spread of any phenomenon
    across space (like a disease)

25
Expansion Diffusion
  • Several forms exists
  • Stimulus expansion diffusion happens when an
    innovative idea diffuses from its hearth outward
    but orginial idea is changed by new adopters
  • Example apple icons and microsoft
  • Contagious expansion diffusion when numerous
    places or people near the point of origin become
    adopters (or infected in the case of disease)
  • Example spread of diseases or KFC restaurants
  • Hierarchical expansion diffusion occurs when
    diffusion innovation or concept spreads from a
    place or person of power or high susceptibility
    to another in a leveled pattern
  • Example rap music moved from large to small
    cities or war

26
Models of Diffusion
27
Relocation Diffusion
  • Different from expansion diffusion where
    innovation or disease does the moving, here the
    people do the moving
  • Examples HIV/AIDS, Chinese food in America
  • Migrant diffusion where innovation spreads and
    lasts only a brief time in the newly adopted
    place-makes finding the place of origin difficult
  • Example the flu, native languages
  • Most diffusion is mixed and doesnt fit into one
    category!
  • Example HIV/AIDS

28
Cultural Convergence
  • Defined process of two cultures adopting each
    others traits and becoming more alike
  • Typically, when two cultures come into contact,
    one will be more powerful than the other
  • Acculturation when weaker of two cultures
    adopts traits from more dominant culture
  • Example foreign foods in U.S. or immigrants
    being bilingual
  • Assimilation when original traits of weaker
    culture are completely erased and replaced by
    traits of more dominant culture
  • Example war, immigrants no longer speaking
    native language

29
Transculturation and the S-Curve
  • Transculturation defined occurs when two
    cultures of just about equal power or influence
    meet and exchange ideas or traits without the
    domination seen in acculturation and assimilation
  • Example idea of melting pot in U.S.
  • S-curve path diffusion often follows
  • Early adopters innovators
  • Majority adopters more people adopt innovation
  • Late adopters stragglers to innovation
  • Example computers or cell phones

30
Sample S Curves
31
Cultural Hearths
  • Defined areas where innovations in culture
    began, such as where agriculture, government and
    urbanization originated
  • Example Andean America, West Africa
  • Considered the sources of human civilization
  • Independent innovation where hearths invent
    innovations without knowing about each other
  • Example agriculture developing in Mesopotamia
    and East Asia at same time

32
Locations of cultural hearths
33
List of accepted cultural hearths
  • Andean American eastward direction through South
    America
  • Mesoamerica eastern and western North America
  • West Africa throughout Africa
  • Nile River Valley throughout Africa and SW Asia
  • Mesopotamia throughout SW Asia, Europe, Central
    and East Asia, West Africa
  • Indus River Valley SW, Central and East Asia
  • Ganges River delta South, SE and SW asia
  • Wei and Huang rivers (China) East and SE Asia

34
Cultural Identities and Landscapes
  • Looking closely at what defines culture

35
Religion
  • Religion defined a set of beliefs and activities
    that are created to help humans celebrate and
    understand their place in the world
  • Religions help define right and wrong within a
    culture
  • Can have profound impact on human interaction
    with the environment through architecture, ideas
    about land, etc
  • Religion is the single largest determiner of
    culture!

36
2 religious classifications
  • Universalizing vs. Ethnic
  • Universalizing try to have universal appeal and
    attract all people to their beliefs
  • Example Christianity, Islam
  • Ethnic attempt to appeal not to all people but
    to one group, usually in one place or of one
    ethnicity
  • Example Hinduism, Judaism
  • Polytheistic vs. Monotheistic
  • Polytheistic belief in many supreme beings
  • Example Hinduism, maybe Buddhism
  • Monothesitic belief in one supreme being
  • Example Christianity, Islam, Judaism

37
World Religious Regions
38
Universalizing Religions
  • Followed by about 60 of worlds population
  • Can be broken down into branches, denominations
    and sects
  • Branches large fundamental divisions with in a
    religion
  • Example Catholocism and Protestantism
  • Denominations groups of common congregations
    within a branch
  • Example Anglicans and Episcoplaians
  • Sects smaller groups that have broken away from
    recognized denomination within a branch
  • Example Fundamental Church of Jesus Christ of
    Latter-day Saints
  • Examples include Buddhism, Christianity, Islam
    and Sikhism

39
Buddhism
  • Origins worlds first universalizing religion
  • Developed out of Hinduism and caste system
  • Founded in India near Indo-Gangetic Hearth
    between Indus and Ganges rivers by Prince
    Siddhartha Gautama born in 644 BCE
  • Diffusion Routes started in India, spread to
    China, Korea, Japan, Tibet, Mongolia and
    Southeast Asia along Silk Road
  • Now nearly extinct in India
  • Nearly 350 million followers world wide

40
(No Transcript)
41
Basic Beliefs of Buddhism
  • 4 noble truths
  • Life is suffering and inherently painful
  • Suffering has a cause craving and attachment
    (selfishness)
  • Craving and attachment can be overcome
  • By following the eightfold path
  • Eightfold path
  • Right Concentration, Right Purpose, Right Speech,
    Right Conduct, Right Livlihood, Right Effort,
    Right Alertness, Right Effort
  • Reincarnation humans cycle through until
    reaching enlightenment
  • Karma Universal law of justice

42
Branches of Buddhism
  • Theravada monastic, practiced by nearly 55 of
    all Buddhists
  • Found mainly in SE Asian countries like Sri
    Lanka, Myanmar, Thailand, Laos and Cambodia
  • Mahayana do not spend time as monks but find
    salvation (enlightenment) through meditation and
    prayer
  • Practiced by 40 of Buddhists and found primarily
    in Korea, Vietnam, Japan and China
  • Lamaism in Tibet combines monasticism of
    Theravada with local images of dieties and
    demons-practiced only by about 5 of Buddhists
  • Leader is Dalai Lama who has been exiled from
    Tibet by Chinese government
  • Zen exists primarily in Japan but growing in
    popularity in U.S.
  • Believes in original mind

43
Cultural Landscape Features
  • Most famous structure is pagoda which is made to
    look like ancient burial mound shapes
  • Bodhi tree in India where Buddha reached
    enlightenment while meditating under it

44
Christianity
  • Origins second universalizing religion to
    develop as offshoot of Judaism when Jesus Christ
    was seen as expected Messiah by disciples
  • Hearth near modern day Israel
  • Diffusion Route used both expansion and
    relocation diffusion from Palestine, has nearly 2
    billion adherents
  • 312 CE Roman Empire adopted Christianity as
    official religion
  • 15th Century colonization efforts of Europeans
    spread it as well
  • Today nearly 90 of Western Hemisphere is
    Christian

45
Basic Beliefs
  • Jesus Christ is the Son of God
  • Bible is sacred text
  • Belief of love, forgiveness and repentance
  • Some branches/sects accept prophets, some do not
  • All believe in personal God who is unchanging

46
Branches of Christianity
  • Roman Catholics largest and orginal piece of
    Christianity with nearly 830 million adherents
  • Hierarchical religion because of well defined
    organization with Pope at tope
  • No real divisions
  • Headquartered in Vatican City in Rome, Italy
  • Protestant Christians nearly 503 million
    adherents, broken into denominations
  • Baptist, Methodist, Pentecostal and Luthern are
    larest denominations
  • Began in 15th Century with Protestant Reformation
  • Eastern Orthodoxy developed in 1054 when Roman
    Catholic Church split
  • Collection of 14 self-governing churches, largest
    being Russian Orthodox
  • Has nearly 192 million adherents and is rooted in
    Constantinople

47
(No Transcript)
48
Cultural Landscape Features
  • Varied landscape reflects varied history
  • Catholocism has Cathedrals in almost every city
  • Protestantism is usually simple, wood, plain
    churches

49
Islam
  • Origins was 3rd Universalizing religion to
    develop, orginated in Mecca, Saudi Arabia around
    600 CE
  • Last prophet was Muhammad, has nearly 1.2 billion
    adherents
  • Is 2nd largest but fastest growing religion on
    earth
  • It is monothesitic and sacred text is the Koran
  • Diffusion Route diffused through Mohammeds
    followers who organized armies through Africa,
    Europe and Asia
  • Successful diffusion led to Crusades by Europeans
    to take back and save lands that had been
    conquered by Muslims

50
Basic Beliefs
  • 5 pillars of Islam
  • Faith accepting Allah as the only God, Mohammad
    as his final prophet and the Quran as Allahs
    words
  • Prayer pray 5 times a day, facing Mecca
  • Fasting during month of Ramadan in memory of
    Mohammads first vision
  • Almsgiving a.k.a. Zukat, giving of money to care
    for the less fortunate about 2 ½ of ones
    income and can be public or private
  • Hajj a.k.a. pilgramage-once in a lifetime trip
    to Mecca

51
Primary Branches
  • Sunni means orthodox
  • About 85 of Muslims practice this
  • Dominate in Arab-speaking areas of Bangladesh and
    Pakistan
  • Believe Sunni Caliphs (religious emperors) in the
    Umayyad Dynasty were not descendants of Muhammad,
    nor were Ottoman emperors
  • Shiite majority in Iran and Iraq
  • Account for nearly 15 of adherents
  • Shia believe descendants of Ali were acceptable
    authoritis in Islam
  • Sufi less than 3 of Muslims
  • Mystical sect
  • Example Twirling Durbishes

52
(No Transcript)
53
Cultural Landscape Features
  • Mosque center of Muslim worship, typically has
    four minarets or towers used to called
    worshippers
  • No depiction of human or animal form
  • Mecca

54
Sikhism
  • Nearly 22 million adherents
  • Very small universalizing religion but larger
    than Judaism (ethnic religion)
  • Founded in late 15th century in modern day
    Pakistan
  • Some see it as syncretic religion (blend of
    beliefs of and practices of two religions) of
    Hinduism and Islam
  • Follows teachings of Guru Nanak with holiest site
    at Golden Temple in Amritsar, India

55
Ethnic Religions
  • Developed before the major universalizing
    religions
  • Largest are Hinduism and Judaism
  • East Asian ethnic religions have many
    branches/sects

56
Hinduism
  • Origins has more than 900 million adherents,
    mostly living in India
  • Evolved in Indo-Gangetic Heart in about 2000 BCE
  • Oldest religion on earth
  • Has many sacred texts including the Vedas and the
    Baghavad Gita
  • Diffusion Route spread from Indo-Gangetic Hearth
    eastward via the Ganges and south through India
  • Blended with other faiths
  • Never really left India and is closely tied to
    Indian culture
  • Primary Branches no real formal branches exist
  • Can be considered both monotheistic and
    polytheistic

57
Basic Beliefs
  • Reincarnation continue through cycle until
    reaching enlightenment
  • Karma universal law of justice
  • Trinity Brahma, Vishnu and Shiva
  • Brahma creator of the world
  • Vishnu he loves you
  • Shiva god of duality, both detroyer and
    fertility
  • Ganesh(a) remover of obstacles-NOT part of the
    Trinity
  • Caste system social hierarchy based on Karma
  • Brahmans educated elite, priests
  • Kshatryas military class
  • Vaisyas merchants and farmers
  • Sudras peasants
  • Untouchables truly untouchable

58
Cultural Landscape Features
  • Ganges river holy to bathe in
  • Temples frequently have food as offerings to Gods
  • Cremation of dead most common

59
Hindu Gods
60
Judaism
  • Origins oldest monotheistic religion on earth
    created 2000 BCE in Semitic Hearth
  • Grew out of tribal belief of Jews whose
    headquarters became Jerusalem
  • Abraham is considered founder and root of
    religions
  • Holy book is Torah (Biblical Stories) and Talmud
    (rabbinical and historical teachings)
  • Diffusion route After Rome destroyed Jerusalem,
    Jews were scatter throughout world in diaspora (a
    scattering of any ethnic group)
  • Jews scattered into central Europe and toward
    Iberian Peninsula
  • Currently about 18 million Jews world wide with
    many living in Israel
  • 66 of Jews live in the U.S. and Israel (created
    in 1948 as homeland for Jews)

61
Basic Beliefs
  • There is one God, Jehovah
  • There will be a Messiah or Savior
  • 10 commandments
  • Kosher dietary law based in Old Testament
  • Primary Branches
  • Orthodox seeks to retain the original traditions
    of the faith
  • Reform developed in 1800s attempting to adjust
    the religion to fit more modern times
  • Conservative most recent branch, more moderate
    approach to the religion than either Reform or
    Orthodox

62
Cultural Landscape Features
  • Synagogue house of worship and community
    gathering
  • All have an ark housing the Torah
  • Western Wall in Jerusalem, believed to be western
    side of Temple Mount complex that was destroyed
  • Six-pointed star

63
East Asia Religions
  • Shintoism syncretic, ethnic religion blending
    Buddhism with Japanese local religions
  • About 118 adherents
  • Ancestor worship and Buddhism
  • Taoism (Daoism) Chinese idea based on philospher
    Laozi who lived about 6th century BCE
  • Teaches people should live in harmony with nature
    in all aspects of their lives
  • Created feng shui the practice of organizing
    living spaces in harmonious ways
  • Confucianism Chinese philosopher who lived
    aroudn the same time as Laozi
  • Teachers a system of morals and way of life for
    Chinese in areas like government, education,
    religion and philosphy
  • Focuses mor on worldly life rather than idea of
    heaven and hell
  • Both spread to Korean Peninsula, Japan, SE Asia,
    North American and Euorope
  • Together estimated 263 million followers

64
Shamanism and Animism
  • Shamanism term given to any ethnic religion in
    which community follows its Shaman, or religious
    leader, healer and truth knower
  • Historically found in North America, SE
  • Asia and East Asia
  • Animism belief that objects such as trees,
    mountains and rivers have spirits in them
  • Taught by some Shamans

65
Largest World Religious Bodies
  • Catholic Church 1,100,000,000
  • Sunni Islam 875,000,000
  • Eastern Orthodox 225,000,000
  • Anglican 77,000,000
  • Assemblies of God 50,000,000
  • Seventh-day Adventists 16,811,519
  • Jehovahs Witnesses 16,500,000
  • LDS Church 12,275,822
  • New Apostolic Church 10,260,000
  • Ahmadiyya 10,000,000
  • Bahai 6,000,000

66
Secularism and Theocracy
  • 4 billion people world wide believe in some
    religion or faith
  • Millions of people have accepted secularism
    instead of religion
  • Secularism movement away from control of life by
    religion
  • Other countries have accepted a theocracy
  • Theocracy government run by religion

67
Religion and Conflict
  • Throughout history, humans have fought over
    territory thought to be sacred
  • Interfaith boundaries divide space between two
    or more religions
  • Intrafaith boundaries divide space within one
    religion, often among denominations
  • Boundaries can lead to conflict that is often
    very passionate and violent

68
Examples of Interfaith Boundaries
  • China and Tibet between Tibetan Buddhism and
    Atheism
  • Nigeria between Islam and Christianity
  • India between Hinduism and Sikhism in NW state
    of Punjab, Sikhist government wants autonomy from
    Hindu Indian government
  • India and Pakistan between Islam and Hinduism
  • Former Yugoslavia between Christianity and Islam
  • Palestine (modern Isral) between Judaism and
    Islam

69
Examples of Intrafaith Boundaries
  • Iraq Sunni and Shia Islam
  • United States Christian fundamentalism and
    moderate, liberal Christianity
  • Northern Ireland Protestant Christians and Roman
    Catholics

70
Language
  • Combined with religion, language creates the
    fundamental components in cultural identity
  • Language is culture trait that is learned and
    passed on from one generation to another
  • Estimates are language emerged nearly 2.5 million
    years ago
  • Language divergence when speakers of the same
    language scatter and develop variations of that
    original form of the language to meet needs for
    new surroundings
  • Example original language may not have had word
    for iceberg because they never saw one

71
Language, cont.
  • Language replacement when invaders replace the
    langauge of those they conquer
  • Replacement can lead to language extinction (when
    a language is no longer used by people in the
    world)
  • Geographers trace language diffusion paths
    through reverse reconstruction
  • If two languages share a common word for an
    extince animal that no longer exists
  • That animal only existed in one fo the many
    places where the two languages are now spoken
  • Then one possible conclusion is that the language
    diffused from the place where the extinct animal
    once existed and speakers carried the word for
    that animal with them

72
Language Tree
  • Developed by Geographers to organize languages
    and is divided into the following heirarchy
  • 19 language families
  • Each family has its own branches
  • Each branch has its own groups
  • Each group has its own language
  • each language has its won dialects

73
Major Language Families
  • Indo-European 430 languages spoken by 44.78 of
    the world
  • Sino-Tibetan 399 languages spoken by 22.28 of
    world
  • Niger-Congo 1,495 languages spoken by 6.26 of
    world
  • Afro-Asiatic 353 languages spoken by 5.93 of
    world
  • Austronesian 1,246 languages spoken by 5.45 of
    world
  • Dravidian 73 languages spoken by 3.87 of worlds

74
Indo-European Hearth
  • About 50 of all people speak an Indo-European
    language, most prominent is English
  • Location of this hearth is speculative
  • Conquest theory says it began in empire-building
    Kurgan culture located in steppe region of
    Russia, north of the Caspian Sea
  • Agricultural theory says it started in farming
    community in Danube River region
  • Either way, it is believed to have settled
    between 6000 and 4500 BCE

75
World Language Families
76
Monolingual and Multilingual States
  • Language can tie a state together or create
    disunity
  • Multilingual states countries where more than
    one language is spoken
  • Can cause conflict over language and ties to
    national identity and power
  • Monolingual states contain speakers of only one
    language
  • Very difficult to find in world of globalization
    but some countries fighting to keep monolingual
    status like France

77
Multilingual Conflict Examples
  • Canada English vs. French
  • Quebec (French speaking) want recognition and
    power against English majority
  • Some have called for secession from Canada
  • Belgium Dutch vs. French
  • Dutch speaking North, French speaking south
    competing for control over government
  • Cyprus Greek vs. Turkish
  • Greek majority and Turkish minority compete for
    control of island
  • Currently divided by green-line partition
    separating the two cultures
  • Nigeria Hausa, Yoruba, Ibo and 230 other
    languages
  • Hausa in north, Yoruba in SW and Ibo in SE divide
    Nigeria with 230 other languages adding
    complications for unity
  • English is official language in attempt to create
    common communication

78
Official and Standard Languages
  • Official language declared by leaders of country
    to be the language used in legal and governmental
    proceedings
  • Usually it is language of majority
  • Can have more than one official language
  • Examples Nigeria and English, Canada and French
    and English
  • Standard language acceptable form of a given
    language as delcared by political or societal
    leaders
  • Example Britian teaches British Received
    Pronunciation English in schools instead of
    American English

79
Last of Language Stuff
  • Lingua Franca language used to facilitate trade
  • Example In Africa where many native languages
    are spoken, business uses English or French
  • Pidgin when groups who are dominated by a
    stronger group adopt a simpler version of the
    dominating language
  • Creole a pidgin language that becomes part of a
    culture and is written

80
Toponyms
  • Defined place names that reflect cultural
    identity and impact the cultural landscape
  • These can tell us what cultures value
  • Examples
  • Controversy in India over renaming the city of
    Bombay to Mumbai-English had named it Bombay but
    Mumbai relates to an Hindu God
  • St. Petersburg in Russia named by Peter the Great
  • Paradise, California
  • Hell, Michigan

81
Ethnicity
  • Defined sets of rules that people create to
    define their group through actual or preceived
    shared culture traits, such as language, religion
    and nationality
  • Very debated term because no one really knows how
    to define global ethnicities
  • Ghetto region in which an ethnic minority is
    forced to live by economic, legal or governmental
    pressures
  • Ethnic Enclave place in which an ethnic minority
    is concentrated, sometimes in the form of a
    ghetto
  • Enclave a place in which a minority group is
    concentrated and surrounded by a hostile or
    unwelcoming majority
  • Barrio Spanish-speaking enclave in a city

82
Race
  • Defined classification system of humans based on
    skin color and other physical characteristics
  • Throughout history, race has been used to
    separate groups of people
  • Example Apartheid, South Africa
  • It is not always a clear distinction between race
    and ethnicity but ethnicity is usually seen to
    incorporate more than just race
  • Example Turks in Germany

83
Social Distance
  • Defined measurement of how distant two
    ethnicities or social groups are from each other
  • Important because tension often arises from
    marginalized (place in a place of marginal
    influence, power or importance) minorities
  • This marginalization can lead to discrimination
    by more powerful social group
  • Tension can also be created by ethnocentrism from
    BOTH groups

84
Ethnic Cleansing
  • Used throughout history to justify the systematic
    destruction of one particular ethnic group
  • Defined process in which a racial or ethnic
    group attempts to expel from a territory another
    racial or ethnic group
  • When ethnic cleansing is taken one step further
    it becomes genocide (when a racial or ethnic
    group tries to kill another racial or ethnic
    group)
  • Examples
  • Slobodan Milosevic in the former Yugoslavia
  • Hitler and the Jews
  • Darfur region of Sudan

85
Gender
  • Defined category of classifying humans
    reflecting not just biological but also social
    differences between men and women
  • Throughout history, there has been a gender gap.
    Current issues include
  • High maternal mortality rates-women in less
    developed countries are 100-600 times more likely
    to die in childbirth
  • Female infanticide seen in countries where men
    are more desired like China or India where
    parents cant pay the dowry
  • Dowry Death a bride is killed by her husbands
    family because her father didnt/couldnt pay the
    dowry
  • Enfranchisement most women cant vote today
  • Gender imbalance places like China and India
    where men outnumber women creating huge social
    problems
  • Longevity gap despite issues, women typically
    live longer than men

86
Folk and Popular Culture
  • Folk culture limited to smaller region and
    smaller number of people than pop culture
  • Usually isolated groups that have long-lasting
    culture traits that havent substantially changed
    over time
  • Example Amish
  • Popular culture mass culture that diffuses
    rapidly
  • Example 1960s or Rock and Roll

87
Maladaptive Diffusion
  • Defined adoption of a diffusing trait that is
    impractical for a region or culture
  • Occurs because popular culture doesnt always
    reflect its original environment
  • Many see this as a negative because pop culture
    has lead to an increase in consumption
  • Created overfilled landfills with water bottles
    or people driving by themselves instead of in
    carpools
  • Examples
  • Blue jeans in warm climates
  • What examples can you think of?

88
Cultural Imperialism
  • Defined the invasion of a culture into another
    with the intent of dominating the invaded culture
    politically, economically and/or socially
  • Many people in the world feel that globalization
    is really cultural imperialism
  • Cultural nationalism has risen in response to
    cultural imperialism-it is the rise of
    anticultural imperial forces, the fight by
    regions and cultures to resist cultural
    convergence and imperialism and remain distinct
  • Cultural homogeneity cultural sameness
  • This is being seen across the globe because of
    globalization and the internet
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com