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Peoples University of Medical and Health Sciences for Women

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culture society anthropology human behavior

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CULTURE Dr. Saleem Raza Qureshi,PhD 1 Culture Culture refers to the beliefs, values, behavior and material objects that, together, form a people's way of life. Culture determines how we view th...

CULTURE Dr. Saleem Raza Qureshi,PhD 1 Culture Culture refers to the beliefs, values, behavior and material objects that, together, form a people's way of life. Culture determines how we view the world around us Culture includes the traditions we inherit and pass on to the next generation Culture: totality of our shared language, knowledge, material objects, and behavior © Copyright 2010 Alan S. Berger 2 Culture and Society Society: the structure of relationships within which culture is created and shared through regularized patterns of social interaction  Society provides the context within which our relationships with the external world develop  How we structure society constrains the kind of culture we construct  Cultural preferences vary across societies 3 Human Culture Only humans depend on culture rather than instincts to ensure the survival of their kind. Culture is very recent and was a long time in the making. What sets primates apart from other animals is their intelligence. Human achievements during the Stone Age set humans off on a distinct evolutionary course, making culture their primary survival strategy. 4 Culture and Society The concept of culture (a shared way of life) must be distinguished from those of nation (a political entity) or society (the organized interaction of people in a nation or within some other boundary). Many modern societies are multicultural---their people follow various ways of life that blend and sometimes clash. On this planet our race, evolved 250,000 years ago give or take a few thousand. But the first cities appeared about 12,00 years ago. Think about that. For 95% of human life there were no cities. What kind of culture was there then? 5 Components of Culture All cultures have five common components: symbols, language, values and beliefs, norms, and material culture, including technology.  Symbols are defined as anything that carries a particular meaning recognized by people who share culture. The meaning of the same symbols varies from society to society, within a single society, and over time. 6 Components of Culture Language is a system of symbols that allows people to communicate with one another. It can be either written or spoken or both  Language is the key to cultural transmission, the process by which one generation. passes culture to the next. Through most of human history, cultural transmission has been accomplished through oral tradition.  Don’t ignore the non-verbal aspects 7 Language and Values The Sapir-Whorf thesis holds that people perceive the world through the cultural lens of language. For example what sport is football where? A. How does anyone translate a concept for which there is no equivalent? B. How About chimps? D. What is the effect of having English as the dominant language on the Internet?  Values are culturally defined standards by which people judge desirability, goodness and beauty, and which serve as broad guidelines for social living. Values are broad principles that underlie beliefs, specific statements that people hold to be true. 8 Social and Cultural Norms Cultures and societies set up norms which are the rules and expectations by which a society guides the behavior of its members. o Norms can be either narrow-minded or rigid. - Formal norms express values as laws and regulations whose violation is strictly punished - Informal norms are those norms which are generally understood but which may loosely defined - Mores are widely observed and have great moral/social significance. - Folkways are norms that govern everyday behaviors 9 Social and Cultural Norms  Sanctions are a central mechanism of social control  Sanctions are the means by which society encourages conformity to norms  Sociologists distinguish between cultural ideals, social patterns mandated by cultural values and norms, and real culture, actual social patterns that only approximate cultural expectations 10 Material and Non Material Culture Material culture reflects a society’s values and a society’s technology, the knowledge that people apply to the task of living in their surroundings. o Examples include books, buildings, physical objects that future generations can use to try and understand us. Non Material Culture reflects beliefs, values, concepts, customs o Examples include Beliefs, values, Religions, ethics and philosophies 11 Types of Cultures High culture refers to cultural patterns that distinguish a society’s elite. Popular culture designates cultural patterns that are widespread among a society’s population. - High culture is not inherently superior to popular culture. What’ll You Have? Popular Beverages Across the world. What people consume is one mark of their status as a “cultured” or “uncultured. - The New “Culture of Victimization.” Pakistanis may be becoming increasingly unwilling to accept personal responsibility for their failings and misfortunes Subcultures are cultural patterns that distinguish some segment of a society’s population. They involve not only difference but also hierarchy Counterculture refers to cultural patterns that strongly oppose those widely accepted within a society. Countercultures reject many of the standards of a dominant culture 12 Multiple Cultures –One Society When a society is made up of multiple cultures that society has to deal with and somehow reconcile cultural differences and conflicts. In addition to the types of cultural variations we’ve talked about, there are other sources of cultural variations. o Most notable are differences based on Race National/Ethnic Origin Religion 13 Cultural Relativity Counterculture refers to cultural patterns that strongly oppose those widely accepted within a society. Countercultures reject many of the standards of a dominant culture. Cultural relativism views the behavior of a people from the perspective of their own culture. There are distinctive subcultures within cultures and even organizations within a culture Earlier, Anthropological studies differentiated cultures on a different basis 14 Characterizing Cultures Currently we tend to consider societies and cultures as : - Preindustrial ( 3rd world) - Industrial ( 2nd World) - Post industrial based on computers and new information economy ( 1st world) What is the problem with these formulations? 15 Cultural Change If Cultures goes through these different phases , then they have to change As cultures change, they strive to maintain cultural integration, the close relationship among various elements of a cultural system. - William Ogburn’s concept of cultural lag refers to the fact that - cultural elements change at different rates, which may disrupt a cultural system. - Three phenomena promote cultural change  Inventions, the process of creating new cultural elements.  Discovery, recognizing and understanding an idea not fully understood before.  Diffusion, the spread of cultural traits from one cultural system to another. 16 Limitations of the Global Theory Global culture is much more advanced in some parts of the world than in others Many people cannot afford to participate in the material aspects of a global culture Different people attribute different meanings to various aspects of the global culture 17 Is Technology promoting a global culture? New and emerging communications, computer, and other technologies. Don’t forget bio tech  It provides a set of concepts that both material and non material culture need to adapt to.  It can span the globe, but not all cultures will accept or adopt to these technologies and the changes they cause/impose at the same rate.  East and West have different bases and adopt at different rates 18 Virtual Culture Today’s children are bombarded with virtual culture, images that spring from the minds of contemporary culture- makers and that reach them via a screen. Some of these cultural icons represent values that shape our way of life. But few of them have any historical reality and almost all have come into being to make money. 19

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