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Culture Culture is a system of ideas, values, beliefs, and customs communicated by one generation to the next that sustains a particular way of life. Social.

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Presentation on theme: "Culture Culture is a system of ideas, values, beliefs, and customs communicated by one generation to the next that sustains a particular way of life. Social."— Presentation transcript:

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2 Culture Culture is a system of ideas, values, beliefs, and customs communicated by one generation to the next that sustains a particular way of life. Social communities (co-culture) are groups of people who live within a dominant culture, yet are also members of another group or groups that are not dominant.

3 Gender as a Social Community
Feminine Includes others Uses talk cooperatively Uses talk expressively Masculine Asserts yourself Uses talk competitively Uses talk instrumentally Children’s games are a primary agent of gender socialization.

4 Cultures are Systems Culture is a coherent system of understandings, traditions, values, communication practices, and ways of living. Aspects of culture are interrelated and work together to create a whole.

5 Nonverbal Also Expresses
Cultural Values Microsoft Photos

6 Culture is reflected in communication practices.
Communication practices shape cultural life.

7 Cultures Consist of Material Components
Material components are tangible objects and physical substances that have been altered by human intervention. Architecture, icons, personal possessions Microsoft Photos

8 Cultures Consist of Material Components
Material components reflect a culture’s values. Numerous inventions related to speed show reflect a culture values productivity and efficiency. Weapons demonstrate values of protection. Tea time, siestas and family vacations demonstrate interpersonal values.. Microsoft Photos

9 Nonmaterial Aspects of a Culture
Beliefs are conceptions of what is true, factual, or valid. Beliefs are rooted in faith, experience or science. Cultural beliefs are regarded as truths, even though they are sometimes false. Values are shared views of what is good, right, worthwhile, and important. Norms are informal rules that guide how members of a culture act, as well as how they think and feel. Language shapes how we think about the world.

10 Cultures are Shaped by Historical and Geographic Forces
Culture depends on its physical environment, especially natural resources. Traditions and history of a culture shape its character. Many Native Americans distrust Caucasian Americans. Cultures steeped in war may regard death and battle as unremarkable parts of normal life.

11 Cultures are Dynamic They evolve and change over time
Invention includes tools, ideas, practices and ways of dealing with social life. Diffusion is borrowing from another culture. Cultural calamity is adversity such as war or natural disasters that bring about change. Communication impels significant changes in cultural life.

12 Improving Communication between Cultures
Resist ethnocentrism which is the tendency to regard ourselves and our way of life as superior to other people and other ways of life. Adopt cultural relativism which recognizes that cultures vary in how they think, act, and behave, as well as in what they believe and value.

13 Responding to Diversity is a Process
Resistance Assimilation occurs when people give up their own ways and take on the ways of the dominant culture. Tolerance A person accepts differences but does not approve or even understand them. Understanding Recognize that differences are rooted in culture. Respect Participation We incorporate some of the practices and values of other groups into our own.

14 Changing Demographics U.S. Census Bureau
% 1995 2050 White 74 53 African American 12 14 Hispanic 10 24 Asian American 3 8 Native American 1

15 CNN, Interpersonal Communication, Vol. II

16 Experiencing Communication in our Lives . . .
View the following video clip and then answer the questions that follow based on material presented in this chapter. A script of the scenario can be found at the end of Chapter 4.

17 Wadsworth Thomson: Wood Scenarios

18 How does Mei-ying Yung’s communication reflect her socialization in Chinese culture?
How could Mei-ying be more effective without abandoning the values of her native culture? What could enhance Barton Hingham’s ability to communicate effectively with people who were raised in on Western cultures? You may go to your student CD that accompanies the text to compare your answers to Julia Wood’s.

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