Intro. to Culture Notes and Definitions. Ethnicity The identification with others who have the same...

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Intro. to Culture Notes and Definitions

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Heritage  Biological heritage: innate, born with it  Cultural heritage: what we’ve learned, grown up with “American”

Transcript of Intro. to Culture Notes and Definitions. Ethnicity The identification with others who have the same...

Page 1: Intro. to Culture Notes and Definitions. Ethnicity  The identification with others who have the same ancestral background A sense of peoplehood Considered.

Intro. to Culture

Notes and Definitions

Page 2: Intro. to Culture Notes and Definitions. Ethnicity  The identification with others who have the same ancestral background A sense of peoplehood Considered.

Ethnicity The identification with others who

have the same ancestral background A sense of peoplehood Considered part of one’s biological

heritage

Page 3: Intro. to Culture Notes and Definitions. Ethnicity  The identification with others who have the same ancestral background A sense of peoplehood Considered.

Heritage Biological heritage: innate, born with

it Cultural heritage: what we’ve learned,

grown up with “American”

Page 4: Intro. to Culture Notes and Definitions. Ethnicity  The identification with others who have the same ancestral background A sense of peoplehood Considered.

Culture Learned behaviors, traditions, and

way of life created by a group of people Learned Shared Adaptive Changing

Page 5: Intro. to Culture Notes and Definitions. Ethnicity  The identification with others who have the same ancestral background A sense of peoplehood Considered.

4 parts of Culture

Learned: not born a culture; made up of learned behaviors (brushing teeth)

Shared: culture binds people together as an identifiable group (music)

Page 6: Intro. to Culture Notes and Definitions. Ethnicity  The identification with others who have the same ancestral background A sense of peoplehood Considered.

4 parts of Culture Adaptive: it develops to

accommodate environmental conditions and available resources (Eskimos)

Changing/Dynamic: constantly changing (technology/clothes)

Page 7: Intro. to Culture Notes and Definitions. Ethnicity  The identification with others who have the same ancestral background A sense of peoplehood Considered.

Class Goal:

To help students value cultural differences while realizing that individuals across cultures have many similarities

Page 8: Intro. to Culture Notes and Definitions. Ethnicity  The identification with others who have the same ancestral background A sense of peoplehood Considered.

Similarities: All people have the same

psychological and biological needs (Maslow’s Hierarchy)

Can you list some shared needs?

Page 9: Intro. to Culture Notes and Definitions. Ethnicity  The identification with others who have the same ancestral background A sense of peoplehood Considered.

Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs Level 1: physiological needs Level 2: safety needs Level 3: love and belongingness

needs Level 4: self-esteem needs Level 5: self-actualization needs

Page 10: Intro. to Culture Notes and Definitions. Ethnicity  The identification with others who have the same ancestral background A sense of peoplehood Considered.
Page 11: Intro. to Culture Notes and Definitions. Ethnicity  The identification with others who have the same ancestral background A sense of peoplehood Considered.

Differences How we go about meeting or fulfilling

our needs is different Depends on resources available,

environment of region, and the groups relationship to dominant society

Page 12: Intro. to Culture Notes and Definitions. Ethnicity  The identification with others who have the same ancestral background A sense of peoplehood Considered.

American Culture Can you think of some examples of

things that are part of/unique to American culture?

Page 13: Intro. to Culture Notes and Definitions. Ethnicity  The identification with others who have the same ancestral background A sense of peoplehood Considered.

Ethnocentric This term mean’s that one’s own

culture traits are viewed as natural, correct, and/or superior to those of another culture whose traits are perceived as odd, amusing, inferior, even immoral.

Page 14: Intro. to Culture Notes and Definitions. Ethnicity  The identification with others who have the same ancestral background A sense of peoplehood Considered.

Ethnocentric cont. We view the world through a cultural

lens.

What are your opinions of the following? Arranged marriages Eating dog or pork Women not shaving Wearing disks in one’s lips

Page 15: Intro. to Culture Notes and Definitions. Ethnicity  The identification with others who have the same ancestral background A sense of peoplehood Considered.

Culture Notes – Day 2 How does an individual learn to

become a functioning adult in his/her society? Enculturation – process of learning the

characteristics of a given culture and becoming fluent in its language

Socialization – learning to function as a member of society by learning social roles (mom, husband, student, child)

Page 16: Intro. to Culture Notes and Definitions. Ethnicity  The identification with others who have the same ancestral background A sense of peoplehood Considered.

RememberWe are not born a culture …

we are encultured and socialized to a culture

Page 17: Intro. to Culture Notes and Definitions. Ethnicity  The identification with others who have the same ancestral background A sense of peoplehood Considered.

Multicultural An individual who can operate

successfully in 2+ different cultures Mastered the knowledge and necessary

skills to feel comfortable and communicate effectively

Page 18: Intro. to Culture Notes and Definitions. Ethnicity  The identification with others who have the same ancestral background A sense of peoplehood Considered.

Cultural Relativism An attempt to understand other

cultures in their own terms; not judging on the basis of your own cultural beliefs How?

learn/know own culture learn others culture Experience another culture

Page 19: Intro. to Culture Notes and Definitions. Ethnicity  The identification with others who have the same ancestral background A sense of peoplehood Considered.

How do we all live together?

Assimilation the process by which one individual

gives up or forgets his/her own culture to become part of a different culture and is accepted by the dominant culture

Page 20: Intro. to Culture Notes and Definitions. Ethnicity  The identification with others who have the same ancestral background A sense of peoplehood Considered.

How do we all live together? Acculturation

merging of cultures a s result of prolonged contact; adapting to or borrowing traits form another culture

examples: Anglo Conformity Theory (WASP), Melting Pot Theory, Salad Bowl Theory

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Living Together, or not Cultural Pluralism

Refusing or not being permitted into the dominant American culture

Ethnic Enclavean isolated area of a minority culture w/in a dominant cultureCan you think of some examples?

Page 22: Intro. to Culture Notes and Definitions. Ethnicity  The identification with others who have the same ancestral background A sense of peoplehood Considered.

Examples Reservations Chinatown Little Italy The Amish Harlem Barrios San Francisco

Page 23: Intro. to Culture Notes and Definitions. Ethnicity  The identification with others who have the same ancestral background A sense of peoplehood Considered.

Macro/Micro Culture Macro : National culture that is shared

by most of its citizens

Micro: traits not common to all “Americans” but common among other, smaller identifiable units of society (peer, gangs, occupations)