CULTURE

in anthropology, the integrated system of socially acquired values, beliefs, and rules of conduct which delimit the range of accepted behaviors in any given society. Cultural differences distinguish societies from one another. Archaeology, a branch of the broader field of anthropology, studies material culture, the remains of extinct human cultures (e.g., pottery, weaponry) in order to decipher something of the way people lived. Such analysis is particularly useful where no written records exist. One of the first anthropological definitions of the term was given by Sir Edward Burnett Tylor in the late 19th cent. By 1952, Alfred Kroeber and Clyde Kluckhohn had cataloged over 100 different definitions of the word.

The Nature of Culture

Culture is based on the uniquely human capacity to classify experiences, encode such classifications symbolically, and teach such abstractions to others. It is usually acquired through enculturation, the process through which an older generation induces and compels a younger generation to reproduce the established lifestyle; consequently, culture is embedded in a person's way of life. Culture is difficult to quantify, because it frequently exists at an unconscious level, or at least tends to be so pervasive that it escapes everyday thought. This is one reason that anthropologists tend to be skeptical of theorists who attempt to study their own culture. Anthropologists employ fieldwork and comparative, or cross-cultural, methods to study various cultures. Ethnographies may be produced from intensive study of another culture, usually involving protracted periods of living among a group. Ethnographic fieldwork generally involves the investigator assuming the role of participant-observer: gathering data by conversing and interacting with people in a natural manner and by observing people's behavior unobstrusively. Ethnologies use specialized monographs in order to draw comparisons among various cultures.

Theories of Culture

Investigations have arisen from belief in many different theories of culture and have often given voice to new theoretical bases for approaching the elusive term. Many early anthropologists conceived of culture as a collection of traits and studied the diffusion, or spread, of these traits from one society to another. Critics of diffusionism, however, pointed out that the theory failed to explain why certain traits spread and others do not. Cultural evolution theory holds that traits have a certain meaning in the context of evolutionary stages, and they look for relationships between material culture and social institutions and beliefs. These theorists classify cultures according to their relative degree of social complexity and employ several economic distinctions (foraging, hunting, farming, and industrial societies) or political distinctions (autonomous villages, chiefdoms, and states). Critics of this theory argue that the use of evolution as an explanatory metaphor is flawed, because it tends to assume a certain direction of development, with an implicit apex at modern, industrial society. Ecological approaches explain the different ways that people live around the world not in terms of their degree of evolution but rather as distinct adaptations to the variety of environments in which they live. They also demonstrate how ecological factors may lead to cultural change, such as the development of technological means to harness the environment. Structural-functionalists posit society as an integration of institutions (such as family and government), defining culture as a system of normative beliefs that reinforces social institutions. Some criticize this view, which suggests that societies are naturally stable (see functionalism). Historical-particularists look upon each culture as a unique result of its own historical processes. Symbolic anthropology looks at how people's mental constructs guide their lives. Structuralists analyze the relationships among cultural constructs of different societies, deriving universal mental patterns and processes from the abstract models of these relationships. They theorize that such patterns exist independent of, and often at odds with, practical behavior. Many theories of culture have been criticized for assuming, intentionally or otherwise, that all people in any one society experience their culture in the same way. Today, many anthropologists view social order as a fragile accomplishment that various members of a society work at explaining, enforcing, exploiting, or resisting. They have turned away from the notion of elusive "laws" of culture that often characterizes cross-cultural analyses to the study of the concrete historical, political, and economic forces that structure the relations among cultures. Important theorists on culture have included Franz Boas, Emile Durkheim, Ruth Benedict, and Clifford Geertz.

Bibliography

See studies by G. W. Stocking, Jr. (1968), R. Wagner (1981), M. S. Archer (1988), A. Hallowell (1988), and R. Rosaldo (1989).

____________________

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Culture  - 64877 results

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...that have resulted from "outsiders" coming into their synthetic culture community. Those other cultures may be the other three synthetic cultures or some other culture or cultures, depending on the specific goals of the workshop. Each synthetic...
...interaction fall. What do we mean by the culture of the Eskimos then? Apparently we mean a distinctive set of culture-traits and complexes found in a number...distinctive character of a certain set of culture-traits, and it is this that leads...
Others, however, view culture as a more malleable variable and emphasize...state institutions, contributes to "culture shift" across generations that results...reason to believe that the political culture of the states of the former Soviet...
...editors conviction that studying popular or mass culture in a historical way illuminates a variety of possible relationships between popular culture and politics. American popular culture has a history dating back to at least the nineteenth...
The Double Movement of Legal Culture Legal doctrine as a discourse has some structural similarity to popular culture as defined by British cultural studies...Deconstructing The Popular , " describes popular culture as neither a fully appropriated territory...
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...and recombined dominant culture with their own cultures in a complex process...characterization of American culture vis-h-vis other cultures is a rather straightforward...intermingling of imported cultures and the culture of the host environment...
What the Market Will Allow: High Culture and the Bottom Line by Tim Vincent The...means to be literate in American mass culture, recalls not only such imports as Huxleys...elitist worries of the 1930s that high culture was in jeopardy; that decade also saw...
...separate from other cultures-have their own popular culture as well as the dominant...a strong popular culture obliterates the...between mass and elite cultures. Indeed, unbiased...of all aspects of culture and of all cultures. In some conventional...
The Evolving Gun Culture in America by Glenn H...country. These two gun cultures have developed over the...twentieth century. Both cultures focus on issues of crime...Tonsos edited work, The Gun Culture and Its Enemies (1990...
...feminist analyses of popular culture in Western countries shows, feminist intervention in popular culture might offer feminist politics...transform society. Since popular culture is a significant site for struggle...meaning, which offers the cultures dominant definitions of women...
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Culture and achievement...between their cultures and the economic...marked by different cultures, and this connection between culture and race is one...course, they have cultures--everyone does...talking about culture in the large...
Culture-driven Leadership by Arkadi Kuhlmann Behind every successful leader is a vibrant culture that engages and energizes employees. In almost every case, that culture has been defined, shaped and personified by the...
Symbolic Culture and Art Education by Don...commercial media, or visual culture? This is not the first time...affect our understanding of cultures contextual complexity. It...Still, studying symbolic culture should encompass the rich...
Corporate Cultures for the 1990s...Waxler A strong culture--a set of shared...itself. We make culture as we organize and...clashes in corporate cultures: struggles by workers...coherent corporate culture from the chaos that...exists. Corporate cultures are the very texture...
...from static cultures, which impede...The progressive culture emphasizes the...elites in static cultures. 5. Merit is...the progressive culture; connections...the progressive culture; their influence in static cultures is often substantial...
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Keeping Capital of Cultures Legacy Alive; LIVERPOOL 08 THE POWER OF CULTURE Vicky Anderson and David Bartlett...Keep the Legacy of Capital of Culture Alive. Byline: Vicky Anderson...Bartlett LIVERPOOLS Capital of Culture legacy will be propelled into...
Political Culture of Schools. Some years back I did a study of the political culture of teachers in nine private high schools in Manila. I viewed political culture as the attitudes and beliefs held communally by a group of school personnel, forming...
Artists Accuse Culture Company of Snobbery. Byline: BY EMMA...yesterday criticised Liverpools Capital of Culture programme for giving big commissions...shunned and ignored. Liverpool Capital of Culture Company last night said countless city...
Dumbing Down American Culture. Byline: THE WASHINGTON TIMES To read...of our new book "Renewing American Culture: The Pursuit of Happiness," one would...shallow end of the pool where American culture has for years been stranded. Lets face...
Museum Looks at Pop Culture. Byline: Gabriella Boston, THE WASHINGTON...the museum. "We talk about how pop culture is part of our nations history as well...the other seven feature various pop-culture items and ideas chronologically, starting...
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encyclopedia articles on: Culture  - 819 results

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...studies material culture, the remains of extinct human cultures (e.g., pottery...comparisons among various cultures. Theories of Culture Investigations have...relations among cultures. Important theorists on culture have included Franz...
VILLANOVAN CULTURE the culture of a people of N Italy in the early Iron Age (c.1100 700 b.c...The Villanovans brought with them a reasonably advanced Iron Age culture, closely related to the Hallstatt culture of the E Alps. They lived...
FOLSOM CULTURE fol s m, ful , a group of Paleo-Indians (see Americas, antiquity...North America from Montana to Texas. Like Clovis points (see Clovis culture ), Folsom points show a distinct lengthwise groove (known as fluting...
ETHICAL CULTURE MOVEMENT originating in the Society for Ethical Culture, founded in New York City in 1876, by Felix Adler . Its aim is "to assert the supreme importance of the ethical factor in all relations of life, personal, social, national...
WOODLANDS CULTURE see Eastern Woodlands culture . ____________________ Copyright 2009 Columbia University Press. Used with the permission of Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.
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