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Quizzes added to syllabus. First Quiz: ANTH 161-04: 9/25 First Quiz: ANTH 161-02: 9/29 Based on textbook reading for the day. Culture. What Is Culture? Culture and the Individual: Agency and Practice Universality, Generality, and Particularity Mechanisms of Cultural Change Globalization.
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Quizzes added to syllabus • First Quiz: ANTH 161-04: 9/25First Quiz: ANTH 161-02: 9/29 • Based on textbook reading for the day
Culture • What Is Culture? • Culture and the Individual: Agency and Practice • Universality, Generality, and Particularity • Mechanisms of Cultural Change • Globalization
What Is Culture? • Therefore, culture can be studied scientifically • Enculturation – process by which a child learns his or her culture • Tylor proposed that culture are systems of human behavior and thought and obey natural laws
Culture Is Learned • Accumulation of knowledge about experiences and information not perceived directly by the organism, but transmitted to it through symbols – signs that have no necessary or natural connection with the things for which they stand • Cultural learning unique to humans
Culture Is Learned • Geertz defines culture as ideas based on cultural learning and symbols • Culture learned through both direct instruction and observation • Anthropologists in the 19th century argued for “psychic unity of man” • Acknowledges individuals vary in emotional and intellectual tendencies and capacities but all human populations have equivalent capacities for culture
Culture Is Shared • Social transmission of culture tends to unify people by providing common experience • Commonality of experience tends to generate common understanding of future events • Culture located and transmitted in groups
Culture Is Symbolic • Verbal and nonverbal symbols • Usually linguistic, but also nonverbal • Other primates demonstrated rudimentary ability to use symbols • Symbolic thought unique and crucial to cultural learning
Culture and Nature • Culture converts natural urges and acts into cultural customs • Humans interact with cultural constructions of nature rather than directly with nature itself
Culture Is All-Encompassing • Everyone is cultured • To understand North American culture, one must consider television, fast-food restaurants, sports and games • Anthropological concept of culture is a model that includes all aspects of human group behavior
Culture Is Integrated • Changes in one aspect will likely generate changes in other aspects • Core values – sets of ideas, attitudes, and beliefs that are basic in that they provide an organizational logic for the rest of the culture • Culture is a system
Culture Can Be Adaptive and Maladaptive • What’s good for individual isn’t necessarily good for group • Determining whether cultural practice is adaptive or maladaptive frequently requires viewing results of that practice from several perspectives • Humans have biological and cultural ways of coping with environmental stress
Culture and the Individual: Agency and Practice • Ideal culture – what people say they should do, not what they say they do • Real culture – actual behavior as observed by anthropologist • People use their culture actively and creatively, rather than blindly following its dictates
Culture and the Individual: Agency and Practice • Agency – actions that individuals take, both alone and in groups, in forming and transforming cultural identities • Practice Theory – recognizes that individuals within a society or culture have diverse motives and intentions and different degrees of power and influence • Culture is both public and individual
Levels of Culture • International culture – practices common to identifiable group extending beyond boundaries of one culture • Subcultures – identifiable cultural patterns existing within a larger culture • National culture – experiences, beliefs, learned behavior patterns, and values shared by citizens of the same nation
Levels of Culture • Directdiffusion – members of two or more previously distinct cultures interact with each other • Indirectdiffusion – cultural artifacts or practices are transmitted from one culture to another through intermediate third (or more) culture • Cultural practices and artifacts are transmitted through diffusion
Ethnocentrism, Cultural Relativism, and Human Rights • Cultural relativism – asserts cultural values are arbitrary, and therefore, values of one culture should not be used as standards to evaluate behavior of persons from outside that culture • Ethnocentrism – Use of values, ideals, and mores from one’s own culture to judge behavior of someone from another culture
Ethnocentrism, Cultural Relativism, and Human Rights • Cultural rights – vested in groups and include a group’s ability to preserve its cultural tradition • Human rights – vested in individuals and includes the right to speak freely, to hold religious beliefs without persecution, and not be murdered, injured, enslaved, or imprisoned without charge.
Universality, Generality, and Particularity • Universals traits are ones that more or less distinguish Homo sapiens from other species • Biological • Psychological • Universality
Universality, Generality, and Particularity • Regularities that occur in different times and places but not all cultures • Diffusion • Colonization • Particularities • Traits or features of culture not generalized or widespread • Particularities may be getting rare • Generalities
Mechanisms of Cultural Change • Borrowing of traits between cultures • Direct – between two adjacent cultures • Indirect – across one or more intervening cultures or through some long-distance medium • Forced – through warfare, colonization, or some other kind of domination • Unforced – intermarriage, trade, and the like • Diffusion
Mechanisms of Cultural Change • Exchange of features that results when groups come into continuous firsthand contact • May occur in any or all groups engaged in such contact • Acculturation
Globalization • Economic and political forces take advantage of modern systems of communication and transportation to promote globalization • Allows larger economic and political systems to dominate local people • Series of processes that work to make modern nations and people increasingly interlinked and mutually dependent