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					CULTURAL DIVERSITY CHAPTER 2 TRUTH OR FICTION  All cultures are the same.  TRUE: All consist of the same basic elements; religion housing, and family  FALES: Societies have created many different cultures in which language, values, beliefs, and practices vary a great deal  Cultural practices are only dictated by wealthy societies.  TRUE: Wealthy societies produce most of the culture and entertainment that is popular around the world, therefore dictating many cultural practices.  FALSE: Each society dictates its own cultural practices.  Sociologists consider western culture superior to all other cultures.  TRUE: Only superior because it is more technologically advanced and provides better quality of life.  FALSE: Cultures cannot be ranked and should be considered on their own merits. WHAT IS CULTURE?  Humans can adapt to and change their environment  The methods humans use to deal with their environment, form the foundation of their culture  Culture: all the shared products of human groups  Physical, beliefs, values, and behaviors  Material Culture: physical objects that people create and use  Cars, books, buildings, eating utensils, and clothing  Nonmaterial Culture: abstract human creations  Beliefs, family patterns, ideas, language, political/economic systems… WHAT IS CULTURE?  Society and Culture are different…  Society: a group of interdependent people who have organized to share common culture and feeling of unity  Society consists of people  Culture consists of material and nonmaterial products that people create COMPONENTS OF CULTURE  Technology: combination of objects and their rules  We need knowledge and skills to use technology  Interested rules of acceptable behavior when using material culture.  “hacking”  Other examples? COMPONENTS OF CULTURE  Symbols: anything that represents something else  A shared meaning attached to it COMPONENTS OF CULTURE  Language: organization of written or spoken symbols into a standardized system  Expresses ideas and thoughts  Different kinds of language? COMPONENTS OF CULTURE  Values: shared beliefs about what is good/bad, right/wrong, desirable/undesirable, etc.  Language and symbols allow us to communicate values  Types of values held by a group determine their character  Determine the material and nonmaterial culture they create COMPONENTS OF CULTURE  Norms: shared rules of conduct that tell people how to act in specific situation  All groups create them to enforce cultural values  What are some American norms?  Respect flag, schooling, job, respect elders, not killing someone, etc  2 types of Norms: Folkways and Mores  Folkways: socially acceptable behavior but not great significance (every day customs)  Shake hands when meeting someone, don’t talk with a mouthful, never let the flag touch the ground. What else? COMPONENTS OF CULTURE  Mores: : socially acceptable behavior that has great moral significance  Dishonesty, fraud, murder, etc.  Society has established punishments for violating mores and to protect social well being. What would these mores be called?  Laws: written rules of conduct enacted and enforced by government. EXAMINING CULTURE  Culture is continuously changing. We call this constant change dynamic opposed to static  There are new words, expressions, ideas constantly being introduced as well.  Name some  Since things are changing all the time, how do sociologists study culture?  By breaking it down into 3 levels EXAMINING CULTURE  Culture trait: is an individual tool, act, or belief that is related to a particular situation or need.  Simplest level of culture  Name some examples:  eating utensils, saying hello, shaking hands, standing and taking a hat off during the National Anthem.  Culture Complexes: a cluster of interrelated traits.  Football is a culture complex  Material: football, cleats, helmets, pads, etc.  Beliefs: rules should be followed, penalties for violations. EXAMINING CULTURE  Culture Patterns: a combination of a number of culture complexes into an interrelated whole.  Separate complexes of MLB, NBA, NFL, NHL, PGA, MLS, NASCAR combine to form the American athletic pattern.  Other patterns relate to aspects of society: agriculture, education, family life, religion. APPLY YOUR KNOWLEDGE  During the 1970’s the term politically correct, which referred to the liberal view of what is socially acceptable, gained popularity. The term was valuable in increasing people’s sensitivity to offensive words and actions. In time, however, the term politically correct became trite as some people used it to support extreme views. By the 1990’s jokes about some of the absurd uses of the term were common and being politically incorrect even gained popularity among some.  Write to me an essay relating the term politically correct to the concept of norms. CULTURAL VARIATION  Your Japanese friend invites you to their home for a traditional dinner…would you know what to expect?  Must bring a small gift to show appreciation  Take off your shoes and put on slippers  Decline the seat of honor a few times then accept  You have to sit on the floor (no chairs) and you cant stretch your legs out (pointing the soles of your feet at someone is bad manners)  Never pour yourself a drink, pour drinks for others  Clean your area after your meal  Place your chopsticks on your plate and fold your napkin WHAT DO WE HAVE IN COMMON?  Even though humans have the same basic needs, we are vastly different  Humans have numerous needs and we meet them in numerous ways  SOME needs are so basic that all societies must develop features to ensure their fulfillment.  The features that are common to all cultures are cultural universals WHAT DO WE HAVE IN COMMON?  A list of more than 65 cultural universals has been established  Anthropologist George Murdoch studied hundreds of cultures to find commonalities  Among the 65; body adornment, cooking, dancing, family, feasting, forms of greeting, funeral ceremonies, gift giving, housing, language, medicine, music, myths and folklore, religion, sports, and tool making  The family structure is one of the strongest in all cultures  Caring for the young until old enough and introducing them to their culture  However family makeup varies from culture to culture VARIATION AMONG SOCIETIES  1930’s Margaret Mead conducted studies of cultural variation.  Wanted to determine whether differences in basic temperament (fundamental emotional disposition) results mainly from inherited characteristics or from cultural influences.  Studied two native groups in Papua New Guinea  The Arapesh and the Mundugumor (Only 100 miles apart)  Do you think these two shared social traits and cultures? THE ARAPESH  Gentle, nonaggressive, receptive, trusting people  Society is based on complete cooperation  Live in close-knit villages of clans  Women bring firewood and water, prepare daily meals, and carry goods. THE ARAPESH  Men clear/fence land, build/repair houses, hunt, plant, care for crops, cook and carve ceremonial food  Both men and women care for the children (fathers are heavily involved in child care)  Children are brought up in a friendly society  Lent out to relatives to increase their trust in people  Taught to channel aggressive behavior in a non threatening way THE MUNDUGUMOR  Aggressive, competitive, jealous, and violent  Delight in showing off and fighting  Open hostility between members of the same sex, forcing scattered settlements  Brothers don’t speak, hostility between father and son (same for sisters/mothers and daughters)  Family ties are through “rope” of opposite sex  Rope: Father, his daughters, his daughters’ sons, his daughters’ sons’ daughters, etc. (same for mother and son) THE MUNDUGUMOR  Wealth and power for men derive from having numerous wives  Many have 8 to 10 wives (help with daily activities)  Children push parents apart rather than unite  Father wants daughter to trade for wife, Mother wants son to help with activities and be her heir  Children also receive no motherly contact or comfort  Many rules for Mundugumor children COMPARED…  How are these cultures different?  Arapesh lived in the Mountains, Mundugumor in a river valley  Arapesh planted gardens while Mundugumor were gatherers  Food was scarce for Arapesh, abundant for Mundugumor  Mead concluded that temperament is mainly a result of culture rather than biology. STUDYING VARIATION  Because there are so many variations in culture, it makes it difficult to study and form conclusions  Remember the Japanese dinner? Were some of those customs strange?  Common to think that when traits are so different then our own  This tendency to view one’s own culture and group as superior is called ethnocentrism  Ethnocentrism…good or bad? STUDYING VARIATION  We are all at one time ethnocentric  It can be good and lead to group unity  Patriotism! USA USA USA  Can also be bad in extreme cases  Cultural stagnation, limits creativity and possible influences STUDYING VARIATION  We should keep an open mind toward cultural variations  Cultural Relativism is the belief that cultures should be judged by their own standards rather than applying the standards of another culture.  Cultural relativism helps us understand practices that seem strange or different from those of our own VARIATIONS WITHIN SOCIETY  Cultural variations among societies as well as within societies!  As Americans, what are some cultural things we share (we’ve named them dozens of times)  The collection of traits, complexes, and patterns make us distinct from other societies  Some groups within society share values, norms, and behaviors that are not shared by the entire population  The unique cultural characteristics of these groups form a subculture  Age, gender, ethnic, religious, political, geographical, social class, and occupation can all be subcultures VARIATIONS WITHIN SOCIETY  Subcultural practices can challenge the values of the larger society  Rejecting major values, norms, and practices and create their own pattern known as a Counterculture  Anarchists, organized crime families, and the hippie movement during the 60’s
 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                            