Chapter 2: Characteristic of Culture
integrated culture
-a change in one part will affect other parts -a degree of harmony is necessary in any properly functioning culture, but complete harmony is not required
diffusion
-borrowing of traits between cultures -can be forced (war) or indirect (markets)
why culture changes
-change in environment -intrusion of outsiders -change in values
not all culture is uniform
-cultural variation related to age and gender -different cultural meaning between sexes -social roles -expected patterns of behavior -every age has milestones in which society starts to treat you differently
shared
-culture cannot exist without society -there are no human societies that do not exhibit culture
dynamic culture
-culture must be adaptable/flexible -can be adaptive or maladaptive
transmission of culture through language
-ideas, emotions, and desires expressed in language -from generation to generation through language
Cynthia Ann Parker
-is she white or commanchee -a persons culture is defined by what they know and how they are (i.e.: how they grew up, who they grew up with, and the values/morals that they have) -culture is not defined only by who you are related to
berdache
-means "2 spirits" -women who think they are men -men who think they are women -recognized in native americans who believe in 4 genders
maladaptive culture
-never want to go to new guinea -health problem that only affected women (excessive trembling, would die within 18 months) -Kuru (really mad cow disease) -to show respect, women would eat the brains of the dead women who died from Kuru (mad cow disease). the disease would be passed on through the ritual resulting in the death of women -mad cow disease caused by a prion (a powerful protein) that caused other proteins in the brain to deform
dynamic culture
a culture must be flexible enough to allow for adjustments in the face of unstable or changing circumstances
society
a group of people who share a common culture and are bound together by a general sense of common identity
subculture
a group within a larger society that has its own distinctive set of standards and behavior ex) amish
crime and delinquency
a sign that a culture is not satisfying a people's needs and expectations
integrated culture
a system with many parts that operate together as a whole unit
learned
all culture is _____, not inherited.
superstructure
all cultures want everybody within the culture to believe the same
social structure
all societies have laws and rules (includes politics, clubs, families, organizations, etc.)
scapegoating
blaming all problems of the world on one minority
acculturation
borrowing aspects of another culture, usually as a result of extreme pressure; making someone change against their will; decline of tradition
dynamic culture
constantly changing and adopting new things
dynamic culture
cultures respond to changes around them
mechanisms of cultural change
diffusion acculturation independent invention
function of culture
enculturate new members so that they cam become functioning adults
culture
every aspect to your day-to-day life
shared culture
helps you predict how someone is like to behave
enculturation
how individuals learn the socially appropriate way to satisfy biologically determined needs
characteristics of culture
learned shared based on symbols integrated dynamic
ethnic group
people who identify themselves as a distance group based on various cultural features such as shared ancestry, common origin, language, customs, and traditional beliefs (who you identify with)
function of culture
provide for biological continuity through the reproduction of its members
function of culture
provide for the production and distribution of goods and services necessary for life
symbols
signs, emblems, and other things that represent something else in a meaningful way
independent invention
solutions to problems ex) agriculture
enculturation
the process of transmitting culture from one generation to the next
culture relativism
the thesis that one must suspend judgement on their people's practices in order to understand them in their own cultural terms
culture
the values, beliefs, and perceptions of the world shared by memories of a society that they use to interpret experience and generate behavior
evaluation of cultures
through -nutritional status -physical/mental health of population -incidence of violence, crime, and delinquency -demographic structure -stability and tranquility of domestic life
dynamic culture
when one element within the system shifts or changes, the entire system strives to adjust
culture relativism
you have to try to understand the culture in their way and in their terms
ethnocentric
you think your culture is the best in the world