Transcript 01 Cutlure

What is Culture?
High culture v human culture
• High culture associated with arts and
activities of the elites.
• The anthropological concept characterizes
culture as that which distinguishes humans
from other animals.
• The task of anthropology is to find out what
culture is.
An Example of Cultural Difference
• Jin & Cortazzi, Cultural Orientation and Academic
Language Use.
• Expectations of Chinese and British Students
• Chinese students, following a Confucianist tradition
expect their teachers to be parental and to tell students
what to do.
• British teachers, following a western tradition wanted to
encourage independence in their students.
• Chinese students were critical of their
British teachers because they failed to do
their duties.
• British teachers were critical of the Chinese
students because they failed to show selfreliance.
• Note that the same (similar) institution
functions differently in these two societies.
Different Human Worlds
1.We live in a physical world
• Therefore we obey the laws of physics.
2.We live in a biological world.
• Therefore we also obey the laws of life.
• Note differences between physical and
biological world.
• Physics: predictions, laws, constants.
• Biology: adaptation, selection, evolution,
reproduction, history, time, coevolution.
3. We live in a social world.
• This world is not limited to humans. Most
animals have a social component.
• Biology and "Sociology" differ.
• Sociology: self, society, relationship,
domination, cooperation, communication.
• The Social world is integrated with the
biological world
• The biological world is redefined by it.
4. We live in a world of shared meaning
• This includes language and understanding.
• This world is (almost) exclusively human
• And involves considerable variation among human groups
or societies.
• We must operate in this context as well.
• The world of meaning includes:
– meaning, symbolism, ideology, understanding
(intersubjectivity), consent, advice, decrees, laws,
interpretation
Ways of Understanding of Culture
• Materialist:
– Means by which humans exist in the material world.
(obtain food, clothing, shelter) (Biological World)
• Social Organization
– Ways in which individuals organize and make
decisions. social relationships: dominance, roles, love.
(Social World)
• Idealist
– Means of shared understanding events of the world,
both other humans and things.
– Culture as an intersubjective world. (Symbolic World =
Language)
Which view is correct?
• All views are correct, though most
anthropologists now accept that these
approaches are interrelated.
Points about Culture
• Culture as a verb (Brian
Street)
– Culture as static or an ongoing production and
reproduction.
• What does culture do?
• The coercive aspects of
culture.
Culture versus Institution
• Traditional view of culture as bounded,
shared by all.
• Culture...is that complex whole which
includes knowledge, belief, art, law morals,
custom, and any other capabilities and
habits acquired by man as a member of
society. Tylor 1871:i (Primitive Culture)
Institution (P. Bourdieu)
• Society is a collection of institutions having
the following properties.
• Field of play,
• Goals,
• Role assignments and practices and
discourse
• Legitimations
• Structural versus Pragmatic Orientation
Examples of Institutions
•
•
•
•
•
Education
The System of Laws
Mariage
Greetings
Institutions can be part of other institutions
(greetings can be part of friendship, education, …)
• The institution is an important tool for examining
discourse.
Structural versus Pragmatic Orientation
• Along the same lines as langue v. parole
• Structural perspective:
– A description of institutional organizations
• Pragmatic (praxis) orientation (parole)
– From the subject’s point of view.
– Institutions seen as resources
– Locus for change.
Relationship between Language and
Culture
.
So what is culture?