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Culture . What is culture?. Culture The values, beliefs, behaviors, and material objects that together, form a people’s way of life. Non-material culture: The intangible world of ideas created by members of a society. Material culture: The tangible things created by members of a society.
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What is culture? • Culture • The values, beliefs, behaviors, and material objects that together, form a people’s way of life. • Non-material culture: The intangible world of ideas created by members of a society. • Material culture: The tangible things created by members of a society. • Cultural shock • Personal disorientation when experiencing an unfamiliar way of life.
What is culture? • Nation • A political entity that is, a territory with specific borders, like Pakistan etc • Society • The organized interaction of people in a nation or within some other boundary. • Relatively independent human group which occupies a territory, shares a culture, and has most of its associations within the group.
Non-human Social Organization • Different from human society • Non-human social life tends to be uniform and unchanging whereas human social life is constantly changing • Non-human social life is based on instincts whereas human social life is based on drives • Non-humans use sounds but humans use language for communication
Components of Culture • Symbols • Anything that carries a particular meaning recognized by people who share culture. Symbols vary with culture. • Language • System of symbols that allow people to communicate with one another. • Means of cultural transmission, Distinctive feature of humans, Language shapes perception of reality • Values, beliefs • Values: Culturally defined standards which serve as broad guideline for social living. Ideas about importance and unimportance of experiences • Beliefs: specific statements that people hold to be true. • Value conflicts
Components of Culture • Norms • Generally acceptable ways of doing things. Rules and expectations by which a society guides the behavior of its members. • Classification of norms • Folkways: norms for routine, casual interactions, which are followed as a matter of good manners and polite behavior. • Mores: Strong ideas of right and wrong which require certain acts and forbid others (taboos). Those which must be followed because they are believed essential to group welfare.
Components of Culture • Ideal culture • What is expected to exist • What should be there • Real culture • What actually exists • What is there • Social Control • Various means by which members of society encourage conformity to norms. • Material culture & technology • Artifacts reflect cultural values.
Cultural Diversity • High culture • Cultural patterns that distinguish a society’s elite. • Popular culture • Cultural patterns that are wide spread among a society’s population. • Subculture • Cluster of patterns which are both related to the general culture of the society and yet are distinguishable from it • Counter culture • Subcultures which are in active opposition to the dominant culture • Multiculturalism • Recognizing cultural diversity and promoting the equality of all cultural traditions.
Cultural Change • Causes of cultural change • Invention, discovery, diffusion • Social institutions • Organized clusters of folkways and mores dealing with highly important activities are called social institutions • Basic institutions • Family, Religion, Government, Education, Economy • Cultural integration • Closed relationship among various elements of the cultural system. • Culture is an integrated system in which each part fits into the rest of the culture • Cultural lag • The fact that some cultural patterns change more quickly than others, which may disrupt a cultural system.
Cultural Change • Ethnocentrism • Practice of judging another culture by the standards of one’s own culture. • Effects of Ethnocentrism: • Promotes nationalism, patriotism, loyalty, unity and boosts morale. • Protects against change (negative or positive) • Xenocentrism • Preference for the foreign. Exact opposite of ethnocentrism • Cultural relativism • Practice of evaluating a culture by its own standards.
Global Culture • Global economy • Global communication • Global migration • Limitations to global culture • Culture and human freedom • Culture as constraint • Culture as freedom