Sociology 100 Midterm 2 - CH 5

Culture Text book readings

42 cards   |   Total Attempts: 188
  

Cards In This Set

Front Back
Question 1
Culture
The sum total of the social environment in which we are raised and continue to be socialized in throughout our lives.

  • Foundations
    • geography
    • climate
    • language
    • norms
    • values
    • current artifacts
    • traditions
Cultural universals
Common practices shared by all societies.

  • But all societies share certain cultural universals
  1. To function for the smooth and continued operation of a society (functionalist perspective)
    • Provides stability & order
  1. Imposed by more dominant societies upon others which are less dominant (conflict perspective)
  • Within & outside culture. Hierarchies are formed.
All societies must:
  • Secure material goods
  • Develop forms of communications
  • Develop the use of technologies and tools
  • Develop skills
  • Provides identity
Question 3
Material culture
Tangible or physical items that people have created for use and give meaning to in a given culture.
Material culture tells about about non-material culture. Material = food Non- material = belief systems
Question 4
Nonmaterial culture
Intangibles produced by intellectual or spiritual development and the use of artifacts in a given culture.
Question 5
Language
An abstract system of word meanings and symbols including spoken, written, and signed forms of verbal and nonverbal communications that are used to encode and decode cultural components.
    • Personal expression
    • Transmission of knowledge
      • The value of Language...
        • Functionalists
          • Shared language essential for the well being of society
        • Conflict
          • Language as power and control
            • History of the words “Niger, upidy and boy” to people of colour
Mother tongue
The first language learned at home in childhood that is still understood by an individual.
  • More than 200 mother tongues in Canada
Question 7
Sapir– Whorf hypothesis
As a function of linguistic determinism and relativism, language shapes reality. Sapir-Whorf Hypothesis: Language shapes and names reality. Depends on your perspective as to what becomes real. Language conditions perceptions of reality. Example: Fear of Snakes (culture dictates they're evil) vs Snakes are yummy (taste is a cultural perception.) Post structuralism
  • Linguistic turn
    • The idea that language constitutes reality
    • Experience synonymous with language
  • Social constructionism
    • Idea that our understanding of the social and / or physical world develop from within social contexts
    • Sapir's linguistic determinism (97)
  • Hyperreality (Baudrillard)
    • inability of thinking people to distinguish between reality and fantasy. We have no way to know how many girls are being educated in Afghanistan, or how many children and maimed in cross fire.
Our own perceptions are not any more sure than those purposed by other cultures.
  • Implications of linguistic turn
    • It means we cannot access a reality beyond our perceptions, which are always interpretations perceptions are reality.
Question 8
Folkways
Informal norms that are based in accepted tradition.
      • Informal
        • Cultural expectations
Question 9
Mores
Formal norms embedded in laws that are needed to maintain social control.
        • Essential norms (typically laws) that are crucial to maintaining social control
Question 10
Taboos
Mores that are considered wrong in and of themselves.
Question 11
Prescriptive norms
Rules concerning behaviours we are expected to do.
Question 12
Proscriptive norms
Rules concerning behaviours we are expected to refrain from doing.
Question 13
Emblems
Gestures with direct verbal equivalents.
Social facts
Observable social phenomena external to individuals that exercise power over them.
Question 15
Ideal culture
Cultural values a majority of people identify with in a given society.