Transcript Slide 1
Global Culture
4.2
3.1 define “culture”, “cultural regions”, and “cultural diffusion”
People who invented ways to irrigate land
developed the world’s earliest civilizations.
Irrigation projects, settled agricultural
communities, and thriving urban centers
are the common factors in the world’s
earliest civilizations. Among the earliest
was Sumer, in the area of Southwest Asia
between the Tigris (TYE-griss) and
Euphrates (yoo-frey-teez) Rivers. The
Sumerians invented a calendar, a system
of writing, the plow, the potter’s wheel,
wheeled carts, and sailboats.
Elements of Culture
•Language One unifying
element of culture is
language.
•The world’s languages are
organized into language
families, large groups of
languages having similar
roots.
• Religion In many cultures
religious beliefs influence certain
aspects of daily life.
• Throughout history religious
symbols and stories have shaped
the arts and architecture.
• Religious differences have been
the root of conflicts in many
countries.
•Social Groups Cultures have
social systems that include
families, social classes, and ethnic
groups.
•Government Despite differences,
governments of the world share
certain features, such as
maintaining internal order,
providing for defense, and
supplying public services.
• Economic Activities Geographers
study economics to see how
people in different cultures
produce, obtain, use, and sell
goods and services.
• Culture Regions A culture region
generally includes different
countries that share certain
characteristics–economic
systems, languages, forms of
government, or social groups.
3.2 identify major cultural regions of the world and significant countries or states and population
centres within each region
Cultural Change
• The Agricultural Revolution About
10,000 years ago when the climate
grew warmer, early nomadic peoples
began to grow food rather than
hunting and gathering it.
• Cultural Hearths The world’s first
civilizations arose in the areas of
present-day Egypt, Iraq, Pakistan,
China, and Mexico.
• They are known as culture hearths
because their ideas and practices
spread to surrounding areas.
• Specialization and Civilization
As farmers began to supply
food surpluses, some people
could give up farming and earn
their livings from other
activities, like shipbuilding or
metalworking.
• The production of goods for
trade led to increased wealth.
• Cultural Contacts Through
trade and travel, people in
different civilizations made
contacts with one another
that promoted cultural
change.
• Aspects of migrants’ cultures
often blended with those of
native populations.
• Industrial and Information
Revolutions In the 1700s and
1800s, people began inventing
ways to mass-produce goods.
• During the Industrial Revolution,
millions of people left their farms
to live in cities and work in
factories.
• The Information Revolution
occurred in the late 1900s as
computers made it possible to
store huge amounts of
information and to send it all over
the world instantly.