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SOCIOLOGY A Down-to-Earth Approach 8/e SOCIOLOGY Chapter Two Culture This multimedia product and its contents are protected under copyright law. The following are prohibited by law: any public performance or display, including transmission of any image over a network; preparation of any derivative work, including the extraction, in whole or in part, of any images; any rental, lease, or lending of the program. James M. Henslin
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Chapter 2: Culture Copyright © Allyn & Bacon 2007 2 Language, Beliefs, Values, Norms, Behavior Passed from One Generation to the Next Story in Morocco – unfamiliar territory and universal norms Material – Jewelry, art, buildings, etc. Nonmaterial Cultures – beliefs, values, etc. What is Culture? - Basics in Sociology What is Culture? - Basics in Sociology
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Chapter 2: Culture Copyright © Allyn & Bacon 2007 3 Using your sociological imagination in culture Meeting someone new and seeing the effects of a much different culture Internalization of our norms – eye contact, space, etc. Culture Shock – When your material and non-material fail you. The eerie feeling is culture shock. Ex. Pushing Ethnocentrism – “Culture within us” - Positive/Negative Culture and Taken-for-Granted Orientations
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Chapter 2: Culture Copyright © Allyn & Bacon 2007 4 Understanding cultures on their own terms Not seeing the culture as inferior or superior None of us can be entirely successful at practicing cultural relativism. Strange foods. p.39 Evaluation through our lens. “Sick Cultures” – Robert Edgerton - Lack of enhancement in our lives Confronting Contrasting Views of Reality Practicing Cultural Relativism
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Chapter 2: Culture Copyright © Allyn & Bacon 2007 5 Symbol – something to which people attach meaning and that they use to communicate Gestures Using ones body to convey messages without words Gestures’ meaning differ among cultures Can Lead to Misunderstandings Looking like a Monkey – “Your momma is a whore” Left handed Americans Components of Symbolic Culture or Non-Material Culture
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Chapter 2: Culture Copyright © Allyn & Bacon 2007 6
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Chapter 2: Culture Copyright © Allyn & Bacon 2007 7 Language Because written language lacks subtle cues, Emoticons – online use Provides social or shared past Provides social or shared future Allows shared perspective Allows complex, shared, goal-directed behavior Like Gestures the same sound in one culture is entirely different in another Components of Symbolic Culture
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Chapter 2: Culture Emoticons - Mike Jones Microsoft Programmer :-)Smile;-) Smile with a wink :<}) User with mustache, smiling :-||Mad :-))Really happy:-DBig grin :-*A kiss:' -(Crying :-P~A lick:-P Sticking out your tongue =8O Bug-eyed with fright :-~~~Drooling =:O Frightened (hair standing on end) -:-) User sports a mohawk and admires Mr. T Copyright © Allyn & Bacon 2007 8
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Chapter 2: Culture Copyright © Allyn & Bacon 2007 9 Language Has Embedded Within It Ways of Looking at the World Sapir-Whorf Reverses Common Sense It is our language that determines our consciousness Language both reflects and shapes cultural experiences Ex. Goth’s, Jock’s Language and Perception: Sapir-Whorf
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Chapter 2: Culture Copyright © Allyn & Bacon 2007 10 Values - What is desirable in life The standards at which we determine what is good or bad Norms - Expectations or rules for behavior “Should Do” Expectations in our societies Sanctions - Reaction to following or breaking norms Positive Sanctions Negative Sanctions Moral Holidays – Mardi Gras, Party Cove Values, Norms, and Sanctions
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Chapter 2: Culture Copyright © Allyn & Bacon 2007 11 Folkways - Norms not strictly enforced Walking on the right side of the sidewalk Holding a door Mores - Core Values: We insist on conformity Taboo – Most extreme more Law Folkways and Mores
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Chapter 2: Culture Copyright © Allyn & Bacon 2007 12 Subculture - A World Within the Dominant Culture Example – Physicians Tens of thousands of subcultures Some broad – Some specific Countercultures - Groups With Norms and Values at Odds With the Dominant Culture Survivalists -a person who anticipates and prepares for a future disruption Enthusiasts v. Gangs Subcultures and Countercultures
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Chapter 2: Culture Copyright © Allyn & Bacon 2007 13 Values in U.S. Society Romantic Love Democracy Science and Technology Religiosity Freedom Efficiency and Practicality Education Humanitarianism Activity and Work Racism and Group Superiority Material Comfort Individualism Equality Progress Achievement and Success
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Chapter 2: Culture Copyright © Allyn & Bacon 2007 14 Value Clusters – values that together form a larger whole Hard work, education, efficiency, material comfort, and individualism are bound together Value Contradiction – to follow the one means that you will come in conflict with another. Freedom, democracy applied only to some groups. Women's Liberation, Racism, Sexism “It is precisely at the point of value contradictions, then, that one can see a major force for social change in a society.” Values Clusters, Contradictions, and Social Change
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Chapter 2: Culture Copyright © Allyn & Bacon 2007 15 Leisure Luxury Crusies Self-fulfillment Self help movement Physical Fitness Fitness centers, IE Curves For Women Youthfulness Botox Concern for the Environment Emerging Values
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Chapter 2: Culture Copyright © Allyn & Bacon 2007 16 Culture Wars: When Values Clash Homosexuality Value as Blinders – What is attainable? “Ideal” vs. “Real” Culture Norms, values etc. that the group sees as ideal However most people don’t reach these ideals, this is what sociologist call Real Values and Culture
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Chapter 2: Culture Copyright © Allyn & Bacon 2007 17 Some Activities are Universal - Courtship, Marriage, Funerals, Games Page 56 Cultural Universals
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Chapter 2: Culture Copyright © Allyn & Bacon 2007 18 Controversial View of Human Behavior Biology Cause of Human Behavior Charles Darwin and Natural Selection Sociologists and Social Biologists on Opposite Sides Sociobiology
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Chapter 2: Culture Copyright © Allyn & Bacon 2007 19 The New Technology - New Tools Cultural Lag and Cultural Change Technology and Cultural Leveling Technology in the Global Village
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