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Sociology Chapter Three Culture Culture & Society Culture - totality of learned, socially transmitted customs, knowledge, material objects, and behavior Culture & Society Culture - totality of learned, socially transmitted customs, knowledge, material objects, and behavior
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Sociology Chapter Three Culture
Culture & Society • Culture - totality of learned, socially transmitted customs, knowledge, material objects, and behavior
Culture & Society • Culture - totality of learned, socially transmitted customs, knowledge, material objects, and behavior • Culture helps to define and distinguish a society
Culture & Society • Culture - totality of learned, socially transmitted customs, knowledge, material objects, and behavior • Culture helps to define and distinguish a society • Society - largest form of human group, consisting of people who share a common heritage and culture
Culture & Society • Culture - totality of learned, socially transmitted customs, knowledge, material objects, and behavior • Culture helps to define and distinguish a society • Society - largest form of human group, consisting of people who share a common heritage and culture • Language is the most critical element of culture
Development of Culture • Cultural universals are elements common to all societies
Development of Culture • Cultural universals are elements common to all societies • Most common universals are adaptations to meet human needs
Development of Culture • Cultural universals are elements common to all societies • Most common universals are adaptations to meet human needs • Ex - shelter, food, clothing
Development of Culture • Cultural universals are elements common to all societies • Most common universals are adaptations to meet human needs • Ex - shelter, food, clothing • Others include sports, marriage, funeral ceremonies, etc
Development of Culture • Cultural universals are elements common to all societies • Most common universals are adaptations to meet human needs • Ex - shelter, food, clothing • Others include sports, marriage, funeral ceremonies, etc • Note: the practices of and beliefs behind these elements are not necessarily common to all societies
Development of Culture • Cultural universals are elements common to all societies • Most common universals are adaptations to meet human needs • Ex - shelter, food, clothing • Others include sports, marriage, funeral ceremonies, etc • Note: the practices of and beliefs behind these elements are not necessarily common to all societies • Innovation - process of introducing a new idea or object to a culture
Development of Culture • Cultural universals are elements common to all societies • Most common universals are adaptations to meet human needs • Ex - shelter, food, clothing • Others include sports, marriage, funeral ceremonies, etc • Note: the practices of and beliefs behind these elements are not necessarily common to all societies • Innovation - process of introducing a new idea or object to a culture • Discovery - making known the existence of an aspect of reality
Development of Culture • Cultural universals are elements common to all societies • Most common universals are adaptations to meet human needs • Ex - shelter, food, clothing • Others include sports, marriage, funeral ceremonies, etc • Note: the practices of and beliefs behind these elements are not necessarily common to all societies • Innovation - process of introducing a new idea or object to a culture • Discovery - making known the existence of an aspect of reality • Invention - when existing elements are combined into a new form
Development of Culture • Cultural universals are elements common to all societies • Most common universals are adaptations to meet human needs • Ex - shelter, food, clothing • Others include sports, marriage, funeral ceremonies, etc • Note: the practices of and beliefs behind these elements are not necessarily common to all societies • Innovation - process of introducing a new idea or object to a culture • Discovery - making known the existence of an aspect of reality • Invention - when existing elements are combined into a new form • Diffusion - process by which cultural elements spread to other societies
Development of Culture • Cultural universals are elements common to all societies • Most common universals are adaptations to meet human needs • Ex - shelter, food, clothing • Others include sports, marriage, funeral ceremonies, etc • Note: the practices of and beliefs behind these elements are not necessarily common to all societies • Innovation - process of introducing a new idea or object to a culture • Discovery - making known the existence of an aspect of reality • Invention - when existing elements are combined into a new form • Diffusion - process by which cultural elements spread to other societies • Technology - “cultural information about how to use the material resources of the environment to satisfy human needs and desires” (Gehard Lenski)
McDonaldization • ...McDonaldization,...is the process by which the principles of the fast-food restaurant are coming to dominate more and more sectors of American society as well as of the rest of the world. (George Ritzer)
McDonaldization • ...McDonaldization,...is the process by which the principles of the fast-food restaurant are coming to dominate more and more sectors of American society as well as of the rest of the world. (George Ritzer) • The McDonaldization of culture refers to the blending of elements of cultures due to the effects globalization and technology
Material vs Nonmaterial Culture • Material culture refers to the physical and/or technological aspects of the daily life of a society (ex - food, housing, factories, etc)
Material vs Nonmaterial Culture • Material culture refers to the physical and/or technological aspects of the daily life of a society (ex - food, housing, factories, etc) • Nonmaterial culture refers to the ways in which material culture is used and to the customs, beliefs, traditions, ideologies, etc of a society
Material vs Nonmaterial Culture • Material culture refers to the physical and/or technological aspects of the daily life of a society (ex - food, housing, factories, etc) • Nonmaterial culture refers to the ways in which material culture is used and to the customs, beliefs, traditions, ideologies, etc of a society • Nonmaterial culture changes less frequently than material culture
Material vs Nonmaterial Culture • Material culture refers to the physical and/or technological aspects of the daily life of a society (ex - food, housing, factories, etc) • Nonmaterial culture refers to the ways in which material culture is used and to the customs, beliefs, traditions, ideologies, etc of a society • Nonmaterial culture changes less frequently than material culture • Cultural lag is the period of time when nonmaterial culture struggles to adapt to new material conditions
Material vs Nonmaterial Culture • Material culture refers to the physical and/or technological aspects of the daily life of a society (ex - food, housing, factories, etc) • Nonmaterial culture refers to the ways in which material culture is used and to the customs, beliefs, traditions, ideologies, etc of a society • Nonmaterial culture changes less frequently than material culture • Cultural lag is the period of time when nonmaterial culture struggles to adapt to new material conditions • Ex - beliefs related to free speech, privacy rights, and censorship (nonmaterial cultural elements) and the increased relevance of the internet on daily life (material cultural elements)
Sociobiology • Controversial study of the effects of biology on human social behavior
Sociobiology • Controversial study of the effects of biology on human social behavior • Ex - are women more nurturing than men?
Sociobiology • Controversial study of the effects of biology on human social behavior • Ex - are women more nurturing than men? • Based on Darwin’s theory of evolution (natural selection)
Sociobiology • Controversial study of the effects of biology on human social behavior • Ex - are women more nurturing than men? • Based on Darwin’s theory of evolution (natural selection) • Species that are able to adapt to changes in their environment(s) will survive, while those that are unable to adapt will perish
Sociobiology • Controversial study of the effects of biology on human social behavior • Ex - are women more nurturing than men? • Based on Darwin’s theory of evolution (natural selection) • Species that are able to adapt to changes in their environment(s) will survive, while those that are unable to adapt will perish • Claims that all behaviors are the result of genetic adaptations
Sociobiology • Controversial study of the effects of biology on human social behavior • Ex - are women more nurturing than men? • Based on Darwin’s theory of evolution (natural selection) • Species that are able to adapt to changes in their environment(s) will survive, while those that are unable to adapt will perish • Claims that all behaviors are the result of genetic adaptations • Focuses on large groups of people who share common characteristics (ex - men or women)
Elements of Culture • Language
Elements of Culture • Language • Norms
Elements of Culture • Language • Norms • Sanctions
Elements of Culture • Language • Norms • Sanctions • Values
Elements of Culture - Language • Language is an abstract system of word meanings and symbols
Elements of Culture - Language • Language is an abstract system of word meanings and symbols • Includes speech, written characters, numerals, symbols, and nonverbal gestures and expressions
Elements of Culture - Language • Language is an abstract system of word meanings and symbols • Includes speech, written characters, numerals, symbols, and nonverbal gestures and expressions • Sapir-Whorf Hypothesis describes the role of language in determining our interpretation of reality
Elements of Culture - Language • Language is an abstract system of word meanings and symbols • Includes speech, written characters, numerals, symbols, and nonverbal gestures and expressions • Sapir-Whorf Hypothesis describes the role of language in determining our interpretation of reality • Since we understand the world through language, language precedes thought
Elements of Culture - Language • Language is an abstract system of word meanings and symbols • Includes speech, written characters, numerals, symbols, and nonverbal gestures and expressions • Sapir-Whorf Hypothesis describes the role of language in determining our interpretation of reality • Since we understand the world through language, language precedes thought • The world of symbols, speech, etc organize the world for us
Elements of Culture - Language • Language is an abstract system of word meanings and symbols • Includes speech, written characters, numerals, symbols, and nonverbal gestures and expressions • Sapir-Whorf Hypothesis describes the role of language in determining our interpretation of reality • Since we understand the world through language, language precedes thought • The world of symbols, speech, etc organize the world for us • Language is culturally determined
Elements of Culture - Language • Language is an abstract system of word meanings and symbols • Includes speech, written characters, numerals, symbols, and nonverbal gestures and expressions • Sapir-Whorf Hypothesis describes the role of language in determining our interpretation of reality • Since we understand the world through language, language precedes thought • The world of symbols, speech, etc organize the world for us • Language is culturally determined • “Political correctness”
Elements of Culture - Language • Language is an abstract system of word meanings and symbols • Includes speech, written characters, numerals, symbols, and nonverbal gestures and expressions • Sapir-Whorf Hypothesis describes the role of language in determining our interpretation of reality • Since we understand the world through language, language precedes thought • The world of symbols, speech, etc organize the world for us • Language is culturally determined • “Political correctness” • Gender-related language - mailman, policeman, etc
Elements of Culture - Language • Language is an abstract system of word meanings and symbols • Includes speech, written characters, numerals, symbols, and nonverbal gestures and expressions • Sapir-Whorf Hypothesis describes the role of language in determining our interpretation of reality • Since we understand the world through language, language precedes thought • The world of symbols, speech, etc organize the world for us • Language is culturally determined • “Political correctness” • Gender-related language - mailman, policeman, etc • Stereotype transmissions - “black” and “white”
Elements of Culture - Language • Language is an abstract system of word meanings and symbols • Includes speech, written characters, numerals, symbols, and nonverbal gestures and expressions • Sapir-Whorf Hypothesis describes the role of language in determining our interpretation of reality • Since we understand the world through language, language precedes thought • The world of symbols, speech, etc organize the world for us • Language is culturally determined • “Political correctness” • Gender-related language - mailman, policeman, etc • Stereotype transmissions - “black” and “white” • Nonverbal communication is the use of gestures, facial expressions, etc to communicate
Elements of Culture - Language • Language is an abstract system of word meanings and symbols • Includes speech, written characters, numerals, symbols, and nonverbal gestures and expressions • Sapir-Whorf Hypothesis describes the role of language in determining our interpretation of reality • Since we understand the world through language, language precedes thought • The world of symbols, speech, etc organize the world for us • Language is culturally determined • “Political correctness” • Gender-related language - mailman, policeman, etc • Stereotype transmissions - “black” and “white” • Nonverbal communication is the use of gestures, facial expressions, etc to communicate • Varies from culture to culture
Elements of Culture - Language • Language is an abstract system of word meanings and symbols • Includes speech, written characters, numerals, symbols, and nonverbal gestures and expressions • Sapir-Whorf Hypothesis describes the role of language in determining our interpretation of reality • Since we understand the world through language, language precedes thought • The world of symbols, speech, etc organize the world for us • Language is culturally determined • “Political correctness” • Gender-related language - mailman, policeman, etc • Stereotype transmissions - “black” and “white” • Nonverbal communication is the use of gestures, facial expressions, etc to communicate • Varies from culture to culture • Read “In Their Own Words”
Elements of Culture - Norms • Norms are the established standards of behavior maintained by a society
Elements of Culture - Norms • Norms are the established standards of behavior maintained by a society • Significant norms must be widely shared and understood