Culture
Culture is
everything made, learned, or shared by the members of a society, including
values, beliefs, behaviors, and material objects.
Culture is learned, and it
varies tremendously from society to society. We begin learning our culture from
the moment we’re born, as the people who raise us encourage certain behaviors
and teach their version of right and wrong. Although cultures vary dramatically,
they all consist of two parts: material culture and nonmaterial
culture.
Material
Culture
Material culture consists
of the concrete, visible parts of a culture, such as food, clothing, cars,
weapons, and buildings. Aspects of material culture differ from society to
society. Here are a few features of modern material culture in the United
States:
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Soy lattes
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CD burners
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Running shoes
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iPods
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Lifestyle magazines
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Organic vegetables
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Sport utility vehicles
Example: One
common form of material culture is jewelry that indicates a person’s status as
married. In American culture, people wear a metal band on the ring finger
of the left hand to show that they are married. In smaller, nonindustrialized
societies, everyone knows everyone else, so no such sign is needed. In certain
parts of India, women wear a necklace to indicate that they are married. In
Northern Europe, married people wear wedding bands on the right hand.
Nonmaterial
Culture
Nonmaterial culture consists
of the intangible aspects of a culture, such as values and beliefs.
Nonmaterial culture consists of concepts and ideas that shape who we are and
make us different from members of other societies.
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A value is a culturally
approved concept about what is right or wrong, desirable or undesirable. Values
are a culture’s principles about how things should be and differ greatly from
society to society.
Example: In
the United States today, many women value thinness as a standard of beauty. In
Ghana, however, most people would consider American fashion models sickly and
undesirable. In that culture and others, robustness is valued over skinniness
as a marker of beauty.
Cult of the Car
Automobile ownership
clearly illustrates the American value of material acquisition. Americans love
cars, and society is constructed to accommodate them. We have a system of
interstate roadways, convenient gas stations, and many car dealerships.
Businesses consider where patrons will park, and architects design homes with
spaces for one or more cars. A society that values the environment more than
the material acquisition might refuse to build roadways because of the damage
they might do to the local wildlife.
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Beliefs are specific ideas
that people feel to be true. Values support beliefs.
Example: Americans
believe in freedom of speech, and they believe they should be able to say
whatever they want without fear of reprisal from the government. Many Americans
value freedom as the right of all people and believe that people should be left
to pursue their lives the way they want with minimal interference from the
government.
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