Transcript Chapter 3
Chapter 3
Culture
Wednesday
Bell Work
Grab Books
Grab Folders
Grab Notes Outline from Back:
Answer in Folders (Task #1)
Read opening box (pg.60)
WHAT IS CULTURE? WHAT DOES IT
MEAN TO YOU? (leave room to answer
again later)
What is Culture?
Refers to the beliefs, values, behavior
and material objects that, together, form
a people’s way of life
Two basic components
Non-Material Culture
Intangible creations of human society (ideas)
Material Culture
Tangible products of human society (things)
What is Culture
Cultures Role
Culture Shock
Two components describe a peoples way of life
Also plays a role in shaping human personality
Occurs when an individual suffers personal
disorientation when experiencing an unfamiliar way
of life
Task #2
Read Thinking Globally pg.63: Answer
What is Culture
Only humans depend on culture to ensure
survival
What do all other animals (except some primates)
depend on?
Culture is very recent and took a long time to
develop as a strategy
Natural Instincts
Human achievement set us on evolutionary course,
making culture the primary survival strategy
Concept of culture is different
To concepts of nations (political entities) and
societies (organized interaction of people)
Elements of Culture
All cultures have five common components:
symbols, language, values/beliefs, norms, and
material culture
Symbols
Anything that carries a particular meaning
recognized by people who share culture
Meanings can vary form society to society, w/in a
single society, and over time.
Read Symbols (pgs. 64-66)
Symbols
How does this
represent a symbol
Peace?
Lesson Closing
Task #3
In your folders
L-J#1
What is culture now? What does it mean to
you?
Cover Movie Project Outline
Bell Work: Get books and Folders
Task #4: Read/Answer
What are the 5 elements of a culture?
What are the 2 basic components of Culture?
Material and non-material culture
What occurs when a person suffers personal
disorientation when experiencing an unfamiliar
way of life?
Symbols, language, values/beliefs, norms, and
material culture
Culture Shock
Read/Answer Applying Soc in Folders (Task #5)
Elements of Culture
Language
System of symbols that allows people to
communicate w/one another
Key to Cultural transmission
Sapir-Whorf Thesis:
Process by which one generation passes culture
to the next.
People perceive world through cultural lens of
language.
Look @ Global Map of languages
Values and Beliefs
Values
Culturally defined standards by which
people judge desirability, goodness and
beauty, and serve as broad guidelines for
social living.
Beliefs (supported by values)
Specific statements that people hold to be
true.
Task #6
Read Robin Williams Key values of culture
Write them down in your folder.
Then reflect on at least 3 that you either identify
the most with, or strongly disagree with.
Lesson Closing
Video on Cultural Norms
Power Media Plus
Social Interaction in Everyday life
Bell Work
Get Books/Folders/Paper in back
Task #7
Read/Answer Essay on page 41 of HO
Morals in the U.S
Values and Beliefs
Values in Conflict
Values w/in a society are often inconsistent and
can even oppose one another
Task #8 “Don’t Blame Me” Outloud
Americans may be becoming increasingly unwilling to
accept personal responsibility for their failings and
misfortunes
Values Globally differ somewhat from high to
low income countries in general. (3-2 pg.72)
Low= often values of survival
High= often values of individualism/self-expression
Norms
Rules and expectations by which a
society guides the behavior of its
members
2 Types described by William Sumner
Mores: widely observed/morally significant
norms
Folkways: Norms for routine/casual
interaction.
Norms
Social Control (Reward/punishment)
Various means by which members of
society encourage conformity to norms
Could be a weird look, nod of approval or
greater than either
Task #9
Complete Your Turn in folders on pg. 72
But think of it in terms of our high-school
And the social control factor that could play into
it.
Have at least an example to share for one or the
other
Thursday Bell Work
Bell Work: Get books/folders
Culturally Defined standard that serve as broad guidelines?
Specific Statements that people hold to be true
People usually react likes they’re gross, and immature!
How does the person then feel?
What is social Control
Mores
What is an example of social control when a person burps or farts in
a restaurant?
Beliefs
Norm that is widely observed; often moral….
Values
Rewards/punishment a society uses to encourage conformity to norms
L-J #2
Material Culture
Material Culture reflects a society’s
values and a society’s Technology
Technology
Knowledge that people apply to the task of living
in their surroundings
What are some examples of how we’ve
used technology to adapt to our
surroundings?
Irrigation, harvesting techniques, cars,
computers
Distinguishing
1.
Sociologists Distinguish between ideal
and real culture
Ideal Culture
2.
Social patterns that are mandated by
cultural values and norms
Real Culture
Actual social patterns that only
approximate cultural expectations
Cultural Diversity: Many ways
Who is the most multicultural of all the
industrial countries?
U.S.
Cultural Diversity can even include social
classes.
People often judge others activities in
regards to two main patterns
High Culture
Popular Culture
Cultural Diversity
High Culture
Cultural patterns that distinguish a society’s elite
Examples of judgments?
Popular Culture
Cultural patterns that are widespread among a
society’s population
Examples of judgments?
Opera, “Theatre,” Ballet, etc.
Hip-hop, rock, sporting events
High culture is not superior to popular culture
Often people just have different interests/tastes
Which culture would play a violin….fiddle?
Subcultures
Cultural patterns that distinguish some segment of
a society’s population
Involve both differences and hierarchy
People too often view “mainstream” culture what really
is those patterns favored by the powerful segments of
the population
They also view the lives of disadvantaged people as
“subculture”
Task #10: Your Turn pg. 75
Are hunting, skeet shooting, and ATV driving any less
cultural patterns than Aspen skiing, playing polo, and going
to the opera?
That is what has led sociologists to Multiculturalism
Lesson Closing
Task #11
Complete in the times on pgs. 76-77
Get with a partner
Each have to look at the others five
subcultures and have to place partner in
one they didn’t list.
Create list and turn in at end of period for
each partner
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZDvLk7e2Irc
Friday Bell Work
Bell Work: Get Books/folders
Answer these questions as Task #12
Cultural patterns that distinguish some segment of a
society’s population?
Cultural patterns that distinguish a society’s elite
Popular Culture
T/F High culture is often superior to Popular culture
High Culture
Cultural patterns that are widespread among a
society’s population
Subculture
False
Video
Multiculturalism
Educational program recognizing the cultural
diversity of the U.S. & promoting equality of all
cultural traditions
Euro centrism: Dominance of European cultural
patterns
Supporters argue that it helps us come to
terms w/a diverse population and use that as a
strength
Often argue for Afro-centrism:
Dominance of African cultural patterns
Multiculturalism
Opponents
Argue that it
encourages
divisiveness over unity
People begin to
evaluate ideas based
on race/gender
Leading to judgments
like “African experience”
and “Asian experience”
Cultural Diversity
Counter Culture
Cultural patterns that strongly oppose widely
accepted ones in a society
Cultural Change
Promoted by three things: Invention, discovery, and
diffusion.
Cultural integration: close relationship among
various elements of a cultural system.
Cultural Lag: cultural elements (material/non)
change at different rates, causing disruption
Ethnocentrism and Cultural
Relativism
Ethnocentrism
The practice of judging another culture by
the standards of one’s own culture
Look @ pg. 81 Figure
Cultural Relativism
Practice of judging a culture by its own
standards
Lesson Closing
L-J #3 : Dice Game
Video
The Way We Live: Common Ground:
Culture
Read from book for Monday
Ethnocentrism and Cultural Relativism
Monday Bell Work
Bell Work
Answer Questions
Dominance of European cultural trends
Cultural lag
Counter-Culture?
Multiculturalism
Material things moving faster than nonmaterial things
Multiculturalism
Education program promoting equality of all cultural traditions
Afro-centrism
Stands in direct opposition of Euro-centrism
Euro-centrism
Dominance of African cultural trends
Grab book/folder
Cultural patterns opposite of widely accepted one’s.
Finish: The Way We Live: Common Ground: Culture
Emergence of a global culture
Read A Global Culture? Pgs. 81-82
Much evidence exists that suggests the
emergence of a global culture
3 Key Factors that are promoting it
Global Economy: The flow of goods
Global Communications: Flow of information
Global Migration: Flow of people
Emergence of a Global Culture
Three Limitations
Global culture is more advanced in some
parts of the world than others
Many people cannot afford to participate in
the material aspects of a global culture
Satellite communication, air travel, etc.
Different people attribute different meanings
to various aspects of the global culture.
Good and bad; different things learned from
similar elements.
Lesson Closing
L-J#4
Video
Way We live: The Sociological Perspective
Tues
Bell Work
Grab books/folders
Review: Task #13
3 Factors that promote global culture?
3 Limitations of a global culture?
Ethnocentrism
Cultural patterns that strongly oppose widely accepted ones in a
society
More advanced in some areas
Many can’t afford material parts
People attribute different meanings to it.
Practice of judging another culture by standards of own
Global economy, communication, migration
Counter-culture
Practice of judging a culture by its own standards
Cultural Relativism
Theoretical Analysis of Culture
Attempting to understand how culture
helps us make sense of ourselves and
the surrounding world
Three Macro level approaches
Structural Functional
Social Conflict
Sociobiology
Structural Functional
Sees culture as a complex strategy for
meeting human needs
Considers values the core of a culture
Values direct our lives, give meaning to
what we do, and bring people together
Cultural Universals
Traits that are part of every known culture
Ex: Family, funeral rites, joking
Structural Functional
Strengths
Helps show how culture operates to meet
human needs
Weakness
Ignores cultural diversity
Downplays importance of change
Social Conflict
Idea that any cultural trait benefits some
members of a society at the expense of
others
Rooted in Materialism
Ties our cultural values of competitiveness
and material success to our country’s
economy
Social Conflict
Strengths
Suggests that cultural systems do not
address human needs equally, allowing
some to dominate others
This inequality pressures for change
Weakness
Understates the ways that cultural patterns
integrate members of a society
Lesson Closing
L-J #5
Finish:
Way We live: The Sociological Perspective
Bell Work
Get books and folders
Make sure you have your sociology
reading book
Task #14: Copy down Chart on page 85
Sociobiology
Theoretical approach that explores ways in
which human biology affects how we create
culture
Claim that the large number of cultural
universals shows the fact that all humans are
members of a single biological species
Based on Darwinism and the process of natural
selection
Sociobiology
Critical Review
Strengths
Has generated intriguing theories about
biological roots of some cultural patterns
Weaknesses
May promote racism/sexism by claiming only
natural selection and other biological arguments
of old
Research support is limited
Read Thinking Globally
Task #15
10 Min.s
Culture and Human Freedoms
Culture brings sociologists to one important
question
To what extent are human beings, as cultural
creatures, free?
Two Views
Culture as constraint
Culture as freedom
Culture and Human Freedoms
Two Views
Constraint
Humans cannot live w/out culture, but the need
for culture does have some drawbacks
Culture is largely habits, meaning we will repeat
mistakes
Freedom
Culture forces us to choose as we make and
remake a world for ourselves
The more people understand the workings of culture
the better prepared we can be to use those freedoms
Lesson Closing
L-J #5
Read book, make up any notes that
you’ve missed
Read soc. Novel or work on project stuff
Review Tomorrow: Complete any work
Test Friday