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Culture. What is Culture?. Culture: is the entire way of life for a group of people who share similar ways of thinking, believing, and living, expressed in common elements or features. Cultural Universals. Cultural Universals. Customs and practices that occur across all societies.
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What is Culture? Culture: is the entire way of life for a group of people who share similar ways of thinking, believing, and living, expressed in common elements or features.
Cultural Universals • Customs and practices that occur across all societies
7 Universals • Economy- • Institutions- • Arts- • Language- • Environment- • Recreation- • Beliefs-
Examples ofCultural Universals Switch to Table from Textbook
Beliefs/Religions • Shared ideas people hold collectively within a culture. • Specific statements that people hold to be true or false. • Beliefs are the basis for many of a culture’s norms and values. • Beliefs orient people to the world by providing answers to otherwise imponderable questions about the meaning of life.
Components of Culture • Culture: a society’s (group’s) system of shared, learned values and norms; these are the society’s (group’s) design for living • Values: abstract ideas about the good, the right, the desirable • Norms: social rules and guidelines; guide appropriate behavior for specific situations • Folkways: norms of little moral significance dress code; table manners; timeliness • Mores: norms central to functioning of social life • bring serious retribution: thievery, adultery, alcohol
Values • Culturally defined standards by which people assess desirability, goodness, and beauty and that serve as broad guidelines for social living. • Values determine what is considered right and wrong, beautiful and ugly, good and bad. • Values can provide rules for behavior, but can also be the source of conflict.
Emerging American Values • Values change over time: • Material comfort • Personal growth • U.S. always valued hard work • Recently, increasing importance of leisure • Time off from work for: • Travel • Family • Community service
Norms • Specific cultural expectations for how to behave in a given situation. • Norms are expectations for behavior • A society without norms would be in chaos; with established norms, people know how to act, and social interactions are consistent, predictable, and learnable. • Social sanctions are mechanisms of social control that enforce norms.
Folkways • Folkwaysare norms governing everyday behavior whose violation might cause a dirty look, rolled eyes, or disapproving comment • Example: Walking up a “down” escalator in a department store challenges our standards of appropriate behavior
Mores • Mores: Means “manners” in French. • Mores are norms that are essential to American Values, close to legalistic. • Mores: The fundamental ideas about what is right/wrong, virtuous and sinful
Mores • Strict enforcement, and insistence on conformity, we learn through socialization via our institutions (school) in society. • Examples: Americans eat beef, not horse, dog, cat; you do not expose your genitals in public
Sociologists Ian Robertson illustrated the difference between Folkways and Mores: “A man who walks down a street wearing nothing on the upper half of his body is violating a folkway; a man is wearing nothing on the lower half of his body is violating one of mores (requirement that people cover their genitals and buttocks in public “(1987)
The Iceberg Metaphor • The metaphor of culture as an “iceberg” is extremely helpful in that it identifies aspects of culture that are: • Immediately visible= explicit, visible, taught (above the water line). Only about one-eighth of an iceberg is visible above the water. The rest is below. • Part of the iceberg that emerges & submerges with the tides= “now you see it, now you don’t” (at the water line) • Deep beneath the surface= “hidden culture” (below the water line)
HOW IS CULTUE EMBEDDED IN PEOPLE AND ORGANIZATIONS? THINK OF CULTURE AS AN ICEBERG: you see it, but perhaps not the important parts Symbols; language Behaviors Practices Customs Norms beliefs, traditions, priorities, assumptions, values