What Culture Is ANTH A-103, Human Origins and Prehistory Larry J. Zimmerman, Ph.D., RPA Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis.

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Presentation transcript:

What Culture Is ANTH A-103, Human Origins and Prehistory Larry J. Zimmerman, Ph.D., RPA Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis

"Culture or civilization, taken in its wide, ethnographic sense, is that complex whole which includes knowledge, belief, morals, law, custom and any other habits and capabilities acquired by man as a member of society." E. B. Tylor, 1871 from Primitive Culture

Four traditional views of culture: 1.Culture is the difference between humans and animals. 2.Culture is learned behavior. 3.Society carries culture. 4.Culture is patterned behavior As outlined by Kroeber and Kluckhohn in Culture: A Critical Review of Concepts and Definitions

Culture is the difference between humans and animals. An anthropocentric definition Tools using versus tool making Jane Goodall's chimpanzee studies Algebraic mentality Opposable thumb Power Grip vs. Precision Grip

Crucial to tool-making and using Opposable thumb Power Grip vs. Precision Grip Power Precision

A revised definition? Humans are the only animals to make and use tools as their primary means of adapting to the environment

Culture is learned behavior. How do humans learn? Imitative learning Language-based learning

Wolf or wild children Remus and Romulus Helen Keller & Anne Sullivan

Signs vs symbols Foundations of language Signs carry their own meaning Symbols are intermediaries and carry meaning for something else It’s raining!Il pleut! Symbols are an abstraction from reality, thus an artificial creation by people.

Culture is an artificially created reality If language is a human creation based on symbols, and language is the foundation for culture, then

Society carries culture. Society—an interacting group of organisms of the same species Society is the repository for culture—language is crucial Society's members participate in it Society & Culture outlast the individual Society and Culture are the dominant determinant of social behavior a. Stereotypes b. Modal personalities c. National character

Culture is patterned behavior a. Culture with an upper case C; culture with a lower case c b. Culture is hierarchical c. Culture is a system Kaibola School, Trobriand Islands, Papua New Guinea, on National Day, when traditional dress is worn

Functional prerequisites of culture Territory/technology People Language Social organization (kinship and network of agreements) Ideology (belief systems/world view)

What is anthropology? The study of culture Tasks of anthropology: Description (ethnography) Comparison (ethnology) Explanation The same as the tasks of any science, but because anthropology deals with people, it crosses over into the social sciences and humanities.

Four subfields of anthropology Anthropological Linguistics Language as a foundation for culture What you can tell about a culture by use of language Variations of symbolic communication-body language Archaeology Studies the evolution/change/development of human culture through time Problems of time Problems of preservation Problems of ethnographic analogy Cultural Anthropology Examines living cultures and all their variety Physical or biological anthropology Looks at the biological underpinnings of culture

Why study Anthropology? 1. Humans are just plain interesting. Dangers: using the practices of another culture to justify your own cultural practices-Ethnocentrism and cultural relativism introduced as key concepts 2. Humanistic reasons If we know what others do and why, we will be less likely to rush to judgment about them. 3. Scientific reasons If you can predict how culture works, then you can change it to make the world better.