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AP Human Geography

Culture and Human Geography. Concept of culture is closely identified with anthropology:Has many definitionsAn all-encompassing term that identifies not only the whole tangible lifestyle of a people, but also their prevailing values and beliefs.Examples of culture definitions.Components of Cultu

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AP Human Geography

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    1. AP Human Geography Chapter 2: Cultures, Environments and Regions

    2. Culture and Human Geography Concept of culture is closely identified with anthropology: Has many definitions An all-encompassing term that identifies not only the whole tangible lifestyle of a people, but also their prevailing values and beliefs. Examples of culture definitions. Components of Culture: - Culture region - area within which a particular culture system prevails. - Culture trait - a single attribute of a culture - simple tools or wearing apparel - may not be confined to one culture

    3. Components of Culture Culture complex: discrete combination of culture traits - example, Maasai of East Africa. Culture system: culture complexes grouped together because they have culture traits in common. Ethnicity, language, religion and other cultural elements enter into the definition. Example of China On the map, an entire culture system is represented by a culture region. - Examples - West Africa, Polynesia, and Central America

    4. Components of Culture Geographic regions: term preferred by many geographers instead of culture region. Culture realm: most highly generalized regionalization of culture and geography. Cultural geographies past and present: - Colonization and Europeanization of the world have obliterated much of the world’s earlier cultural geography. - Very little left on the map we might have constructed of indigenous North American cultures. - Figure 2-2 shows generalized “modern” culture regions in Africa

    5. Cultural Geographies Past and Present The world is made up of constantly changing, often overlapping mix of traditional and modern regions. Key topics in cultural geography - The Cultural Landscape - Reveals a distinctive cultural environment - Composite of artificial features- cultural landscape.

    6. The Cultural Landscape Carl Sauer’s definition Includes all indentifiably human-induced changes in the natural landscape. Sequent occupance defined U.S. CBD contrasts with clustered Japanese city. The whole of a cultural landscape can not be represented on a map.

    7. Culture Hearth’s The sources of civilization. Place where people have succeeded, where invention and effort have been rewarded: People increased in numbers and strength Places of comparative stability and general progress. These were the places where the first large cluster of human population developed. Progress in farming techniques led to larger yields to support more people. Exploitation of local resources generated power over resources located farther away. As society grew more complex people did not need to devote all their time to subsistence.

    8. Culture Hearth’s New ideas, innovations, and ideologies radiated outward. Some cultural hearths remained rather isolated while others kept growing. Early hearths developed in Southwest Asia and North Africa, South and Southeast Asia. Later hearths developed in Middle and South America in the highlands. All ancient culture hearths in figure 2-4 achieved breakthroughs in agriculture. Shifts in culture hearths: Locations and nature of cultural innovations of recent centuries are very different.

    9. Culture Hearth’s Centered in Europe, North America, and East Asia (figure 2-4). Cultural Diffusion: - Occurs through the movement of people, goods, or ideas. - Today’s majority of culture’s are products of innumerable ideas and innovations that arrived in an endless, centuries- long stream. Independent invention: occurred when the same ideas or innovations appeared in widely separated areas.

    10. Cultural Diffusion Expansion diffusion: an idea or innovation develops in a core area and remains strong there while spreading outward. Contagious diffusion: a form of expansion diffusion in which nearly all adjacent individuals are affected. Hierarchical diffusion: main channel of diffusion lies through some segment of those susceptible or adopting what is being diffused. Stimulus diffusion: ideas may not be adopted but may result in local experimentation.

    11. Relocation Diffusion Individuals carry an innovation or idea to a new locale where they disseminate it. Acculturation: less dominant culture adopts cultural elements of the dominant culture. Assimilation: adoption of cultural elements is so complete the two cultures become one. Transculturation: two cultures more equal in numbers strength and complexity function as sources and adopters.

    12. Migrant Diffusion An innovation loses usage at its source but is adopted farther away. Forces working against the diffusion process. Time-distance decay Cultural barriers Cultural perception - Perceptual regions: intellectual constructs designed to help us understand the nature and distribution of phenomena. - Based on our knowledge about regions and cultures - Difficult to put a culture region on a map - example of the Mid-Atlantic region. (figure 2-6).

    13. Cultural Perception Describing the South Terry Jordan’s “Perceptual Regions in Texas” (figure 2-7). Perceptual Regions in the United States - Wilbur Zelinsky used telephone directories to develop a 12 region map of the United States (figure 2-8). - Results show close similarity between perceptual regions and culture regions. Regional Identity - the South - Unlike any other - Confederate flag still has connotation - Has vigorous supporters and defenders.

    14. Cultural Environments Culture and Environment Relationships between human societies and the natural environment are complex. Reflected by different housing types. Diverse crops grown, and kinds of livestock maintained Societies modify their natural environments in ways ranging from slight to severe No society can completely escape the forces of nature.

    15. Cultural Environments Environmental Determinism: holds that the human behavior is strongly affected by and even controlled or determined by the environment that prevails. Suggests that climate is the critical factor Affects progress and productiveness in culture, politics, and technology. Was a belief held by many until the middle of the 20th century. Aristotle stated this belief 23 centuries ago. Ellsworth Huntington in 1940 published a book expressing this belief.

    16. Cultural Environments Environmental Determinism: Some geographers recognized exceptions to the environmentalists’ postulations. Early cultural hearths appear to be in unfavorable climactic zones. The Mayan civilization arose under tropical conditions. S.F. Markham wrote a book based on climactic changes and their effects on cultural development. - he felt the Mediterranean region was cooler at the time great civilizations arose. - As temperatures from the retreating Ice Age modified, Europe was able to gain prominence. Now agreed humans are the decision makers and modifiers, not slaves of environmental forces.

    17. Cultural Environments The school of possibilism emerged Natural environment’s role does no more than limit the range of choices available to a culture. Choices made by a society depend on the people’s requirements and the technology available. Influence of environment declines with increasing modernization and technology. Political ecology: area of inquiry fundamentally concerned with the environmental consequences of dominant political-economic arrangements and understandings. Changeable weather seems to influence significant numbers of people, physically and mentally. Human will is too powerful to be the mere object of nature’s design.

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