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Chapter 4 Folk and Popular Culture. What is Culture? Regional differences that are the essence of Human Geography Culture can be visible and invisible.

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Presentation on theme: "Chapter 4 Folk and Popular Culture. What is Culture? Regional differences that are the essence of Human Geography Culture can be visible and invisible."— Presentation transcript:

1 Chapter 4 Folk and Popular Culture

2 What is Culture? Regional differences that are the essence of Human Geography Culture can be visible and invisible What are the different elements of culture?

3 Definition of Culture Culture is the specialized behavioral social patterns, understandings, adaptations, and social systems that summarize a group of people’s learned way of life.

4 C ULTURE : The total way of life of a society, it is learned, shared, adaptive, and dynamic.

5 Habits are formed in the way individuals do things. Customs develop as a group practices a repetitive habit that eventually becomes the norm.

6 Norms : The beliefs and values that influence our actions and affect our outward behavior.

7 Customs : norms that come about as solutions to human problems, two kinds: Folkways and Mores.

8 Folkways : The ordinary rules of daily behavior which are accepted and expected by the members of a given society. Preferred behavior.

9 Mores : customs that are deemed necessary for the welfare of the society. Required behavior.

10 Laws - mores that have been codified and carry specific consequences Laws - mores that have been codified and carry specific consequences Death

11 Taboo - a religious or magical stricture, something that is not done for fear of punishment by magic or God.

12 Folkway, More or Taboo? Eating with Chopsticks Not marrying your sister Stopping at red light Bowing when meeting Not eating pork

13 Not eating human flesh Removing shoes at door Holding door for women Taking off hat indoors

14 Culture Displays a Social Structure Framework of roles and interrelationships of individuals and groups. Individuals learn and adhere to the rules not only of the culture but of specific subcultures to which he/she belongs.

15 Sub – Cultures in America

16 Components (structure) of Culture Culture Traits Culture Complex Culture Region Culture Realm Globalization Small Large

17 Culture Traits Smallest item of culture-building block of culture. Learned behavior ranging from language spoken to tools to games. They can be objects, techniques, beliefs, or attitudes.

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19 Culture Complex Individual cultural traits that are functionally interrelated. Examples include: religious complexes, business behavior complexes, sports complexes.

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21 Culture Regions Culture traits and complexes have areal (spatial) extent. Used to show the spatial extent of similar cultural areas. Examples - Cajun Region http://www.louisianamuseums.org/trail/images/map/map_cajun.gif

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23 Culture Realm Cultural regions showing similar complexes and landscapes are grouped to form a larger area.

24 Cultural Realms of the Modern World Figure 2.4 2-1 Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.

25 Structure of Culture Two schools - different terms similar ideas

26 Two Schools of Thought to Structure Culture Leslie White Ideological subsystem –Ideas beliefs and knowledge of a culture and the ways these ideas are expressed in speech or other forms of communication. Julian Huxley Mentifacts - –what we ought to believe, value and how we should act Mythology, theology, legend, literature, philosophy, language, and religion.

27 White Huxley Technological subsystem Material objects, together with the techniques of their use. Tools and weapons. Artifacts Guns, planes, cars, i-pods, hammers, swords, plows and rockets.

28 White Huxley Sociological subsystem Sum of those accepted and expected patterns of interpersonal relations that find their outlet in economic, political, military, religious, kinship and other associations. Sociofacts Defines the social organization of culture. Dictates our social behavior. Family, Army, Government, Wall Street

29 Identify elements in each of the following pictures as artifact, sociofact or mentifact - briefly explain your reasons. It is possible for elements of the pictures to represent a combination of categories. 2.1. 3.4.

30 Cultural Landscape - Carl Sauer “The cultural landscape is fashioned from a natural landscape by a cultural group. Culture is the agent, the natural area is the medium, the cultural landscape is the result. Under the influence of a given culture, itself changing through time, the landscape undergoes development, passing through phases, and probably reaching ultimately the end of its cycle of development. With the introduction of a different -that is an alien- culture, a rejuvenation of the cultural sets in, or a new landscape is superimposed on remnants of an older one.”

31 Stable and close knit Usually a rural community Tradition controls Resistance to change Buildings erected without architect or blueprint using locally available building materials anonymous origins, diffuses slowly through migration. Develops over time. Clustered distributions: isolation/lack of interaction breed uniqueness and ties to physical environment. Folk Culture

32 FOLK ARCHITECTURE

33 Effects on Landscape: usually of limited scale and scope. Agricultural: fields, terraces, grain storage Dwellings: historically created from local materials: wood, brick, stone, skins; often uniquely and traditionally arranged; always functionally tied to physical environment.

34 FOLK FOOD How did such differences develop?

35 Hog Production and Food Cultures Fig. 4-6: Annual hog production is influenced by religious taboos against pork consumption in Islam and other religions. The highest production is in China, which is largely Buddhist.

36 U.S. House Types by Region Small towns in different regions of the eastern U.S. have different combinations of five main traditional house types.

37 North American Folk Culture Regions

38 Food Taboos: Jews – can’t eat animals that chew cud, that have cloven feet; can’t mix meat and milk, or eat fish lacking fins or scales; Muslims – no pork; Hindus – no cows (used for oxen during monsoon) Washing Cow in Ganges

39 Popular Culture Clothing: Jeans, for example, and have become valuable status symbols in many regions including Asia and Russia despite longstanding folk traditions. Soft Drinks – Coke and Pepsi can be Found all over the world.

40 Popular Culture Wide Distribution: differences from place to place uncommon, more likely differences at one place over time. Housing: only small regional variations, more generally there are trends over time Food: franchises, cargo planes, superhighways and freezer trucks have eliminated much local variation. Limited variations in choice regionally, esp. with alcohol and snacks. Substantial variations by ethnicity.

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