Culture and Society: Based On Openstax Introduction To Sociology 2E
Culture and Society: Based On Openstax Introduction To Sociology 2E
Culture and Society: Based On Openstax Introduction To Sociology 2E
Chapter 3
Based on OpenStax
Introduction to Sociology 2e
Introduction to Culture
• What is culture?
– Culture is not
• Biological or genetically programmed behaviors such as
breathing, hunger and the need to sleep
• Individual or idiosyncratic behaviors – i.e. behaviors
that are not shared by other individuals
Culture
Clyde Kluckholm
• Culture is like water for fish, we swim in a sea of
culture, it would hardly be a fish that discovers
water.”
Culture - Definitions
• Worldviews
– How individuals in culture view the world (reincarnation happens)
• Values
– What is desirable and given precedence or positive attention in a culture
• Norms
– Statistical Norms: What is most common
– Conventions/folkways: What is expected in a culture
– Mores: Norms with a moral component attached to them
– Laws: Norms with a formal component decided upon by lawmakers that also
come with formal consequence if you break them - like going to jail if you
commit theft
What Does Culture Provide?
• Beliefs:
– Idea that are commonly held within a culture – such as the belief if
ghosts
• Knowledge:
– Things that are required for you to survive in a culture –like how to
drive a car
What Does Culture Provide?
• Status:
– Ones social titles – For example Professor or
Student
• Role: The behaviors associated with a status
What Does Culture Provide?
• Social Institutions:
– All cultures have institutions which are behaviors
shared by the group that help make interaction
work between people
• Government
• Healthcare
• Economic institutions
• Education
• The Family
Culture and Society
• Society
– People who live within a defined territory and interact to
create a culture.
– Societies may be composed of several cultures and
subcultures.
• Subculture
– A group with a larger culture that has distinct
characteristics, norms and values.
• Counterculture
– A type of subculture that develops a belief system and
norms that strongly oppose the culture of the dominant
society.
How Do We React To Cultural
Differences?
• Xenophobia - fear of someone just because
they are different
• Culture Shock – often experienced when
someone first enters a culture and their
expectations do not match the reality
• Ethnocentrism – a feeling that one’s culture is
superior or literally translated ethnic central
How Do We React To Cultural
Differences?
• Assimilation or Host Conformity
– What happens when a new group moves into a culture and begins to conform to the
norms of that culture sometimes by force and sometimes by choice
• Melting Pot
– Amalgamation/blending
– When several cultures come together and blend their ideas and practices
• Salad Bowl
– Pluralism
– When several cultures exist together in the same society but maintain their distinct
cultural differences
How Do We React To Cultural
Differences?
Cultural Relativism
• The idea that every culture is valuable and
each has their own way of doing things and
that no way is better than another
– Some cultures drive on the left or right side of the
road – it is just a decision made by the culture or a
tradition