Transcript Culture
CULTURAL DIVERSITY
Chapter 2, Section 1
WHAT IS CULTURE?
Culture, the shared products of human groups,
comes in two forms- material and nonmaterial.
It should not be confused with the term society,
which refers to a group of people who share
culture and a feeling of unity.
In short, societies are people, and culture refers to
the components people create.
Material culture= physical objects such as
books, clothing, utensils, etc.
Nonmaterial culture= abstract human
creations, such as beliefs, language, ideas, etc.
COMPONENTS OF CULTURE
There are 5 basic components of culture that all
societies have some form of. They are:
Technology
Symbols
Language
Values
Norms
COMPONENTS OF CULTURE
Technology
Combination of objects and rules for using
them.
Items of material culture, and the knowledge of
how to use them.
Also incorporates ideas.
Symbols
Anything that represents something else and has a
shared meaning.
Form of communication between members of a society.
Though the symbols may be different, they are used the
same from culture to culture.
COMPONENTS OF CULTURE
Language
Organization of written or spoken symbols into a
standardized system.
Values
Shared beliefs about what is good or bad, right or
wrong, desirable or undesirable.
Help determine the character of a group of people.
Norms
Shared rules of conduct that tell how to act in a given
situation.
Expectations of behavior not everyone’s actions will
be in line with these.
TYPES OF NORMS
Folkways= socially acceptable behavior that do
not have great moral significance attached.
Common customs of everyday life.
Examples:
Eating steak with utensils instead of your hands
Covering your mouth when you yawn
Shaking hands when you meet someone
Mores= great moral significance attached;
otherwise, the stability of society would be upset.
Examples:
Dishonesty, fraud, aldultery
VIOLATION OF MORES
Societies
have established laws for when
mores are violated.
Written rules of conduct enacted and enforced
by the government.
However,
not all laws are established for
mores– some are in place to enforce
folkways, such as not parking in a
handicap spot.
EXAMINING CULTURE
Culture
is dynamic rather than static– it
changes over time. Cultures adapt as the
world around us changes.
Sociologists
study culture on three levels
of complexity:
Cultural traits
Cultural complexes
Cultural patterns
EXAMINING CULTURE
Cultural trait= simplest level of culture; an
individual item, act or belief.
Cultural complex= cultural traits come
together to make up a cultural complex.
Multiple items, acts or beliefs.
Cultural pattern= multiple cultural complexes;
together they form large parts of a society’s
culture.
LEVELS OF CULTURE– EXAMPLE
American sports cultural pattern
Football cultural complex
Helmet cultural trait