ANT2
CULTURE: GIVING MEANING TO HUMAN LIVES
Chapter 2
What is Culture?
There are 7 elements of culture:
1. Culture is learned
2. Culture is shared
3. Culture uses symbols
4. Cultures are dynamic, always adapting and changing
5. Culture is integrated with daily experience
6. Culture shapes everybody's life
7. Understanding culture involves overcoming ethnocentrism
Culture is “the complex whole which includes knowledge, belief, art, law, morals,
custom, and any other capabilities acquired by man as a member of society” (E.B.
Tylor, 1832-1917).
1) Enculturation
The process of learning the social rules and cultural logic of a society. This
begins at birth.
All human beings are born with the ability
to learn culture, nobody is born a fully
formed cultural being. We learn through
observation, mimicry, and emulation
(parents and peers), technical instruction
(e.g., how to hold a fork, tie your shoes, do
math), and conditioning ( i.e., reinforced or
discouraged through a series of rewards
and punishments, both physical and social
(getting a spanking, Amish shunning).
Enculturation happens both explicitly and implicitly
Throughout your schooling, your teachers have explicitly taught you many
things you need to know to be a productive member of society (to write,
analyze text, do mathematics), while implicitly lessons of obedience and
respect for authority are learned by sitting in rows facing forward.
2) Culture is Shared
■ Culture is shared among members of a
society. In other words, the elements that
make up what it means to be American,
or what it means to be a Kalahari
Bushman, or what it means to be
Scottish, are commonly understood
among all members of that group. These
same elements tend not to be understood
by members of other cultures or
societies.
– Culture can be transmitted face to face or virtually using a variety of technological innovations.
3) Culture as a System of Symbols
■ Symbol: An object, idea, image, figure, or character
that represents something else
– Can be verbal or nonverbal
■ Clifford Geertz’s interpretative theory of culture is
the idea that culture is embodied and transmitted
through symbols
– Example: is it a wink or a twitch?
4) Culture is Dynamic
■ Culture is comprised of a dynamic and
interrelated set of social, economic, and belief
structures
– This is the key to understanding how the
whole of culture operates
■ Cultures change constantly!
■ Why do cultures change?
– Environmental change
– Population growth
– Intrusion by outsiders
– Changing values
■ Different aspects of culture change at different
rates
5) Culture is Integrated with Daily Experience
■ Integrated with daily experience
■ All aspects of culture function as a whole
■ We have biological needs, such as food, sleep,
etc., but culture shapes those activities
6) Everyone Has Culture, and it Shapes Your Life
■ Yet, like accents, we tend to notice cultures
more when they differ from those we are
familiar with
■ In the United States, there is a tendency to view
minorities, immigrants, and others who differ
from white middle-class norms as “people with
culture”
■ By differing from mainstream patterns, a
group’s culture becomes more visible
– The more “culture” one appears to have,
the less power one wields.
7) Overcoming Ethnocentrism, Achieving Cultural Relativism
■ Cultural relativism involves
interpreting another culture using
goals, values, and beliefs rather
than one’s own.
■ Does not mean necessarily
accepting and defending all the
things people do
– Not the equivalent of moral or
ethical relativism
If culture is emergent and dynamic, why does it feel so stable?
■ Societies function most smoothly when cultural processes feel natural and stable
– People need cultural stability
■ Enculturation occurs constantly
■ Our experience of culture is repeatedly stabilized by symbols, values, norms, and traditions
Symbols
■ A symbols is something that conventionally, and
arbitrarily, stands for something else
■ Symbols do change (sometimes dramatically), but
are particularly stable
■ Symbols are easily remembered
■ Symbols preserve a culture’s conventional
meanings
Values
■ Are symbolic expressions of intrinsically desirable principles or qualities.
■ Tend to conserve a society’s dominant ideas about morality and social
issues.
■ Can change . . . but more slowly than other aspects of culture.
Norms
■ Typical patterns of behavior, the unwritten
rules of everyday life
■ Remain stable because people learn
them from an early age and because
society encourages conformity
■ Are usually unnoticed by people until
they’re violated
Traditions
■ Are the most enduring and ritualized
aspects of a culture
■ Are usually assumed to be timeless (or,
at least, very old)
– Makes challenging traditions difficult,
even if they justify actions that make no
sense in modern times
■ The powerful notion that things have
always been a certain way makes
challenging traditions difficult, even if
they justify actions that make no logical
sense in modern times
How is culture expressed through social institutions?
■ Culture feels stable because it is expressed and reinforced by social institutions:
– the organized sets of social relationships that link individuals to each other in a
structured way in a particular society
■ These institutions include
– Patterns of kinship and marriage
– Economic activities
– Religious institutions
– Political forms
Can anybody own culture?
■ Nobody can own “the collective
processes that make the artificial
seem natural”
– Conflicts do arise over claims to the
exclusive right to use symbols that
give culture power and meaning
■ Cultural appropriation: unilateral
decision of one social group to take
control over the symbols, practices,
or objects of another
Conclusion
■ At the heart of all anthropological discussions of culture is the idea that culture
helps people understand and respond to a constantly changing world
■ A holistic perspective on culture illustrates how different domains of a society
interrelate, but culture is dynamic—responding to innovation, creativity, and
struggles over meaning
■ In spite of the difficulties studying culture, it is more important that ever to
understand culture, what it is, and how cultural processes work.
– The big and urgent matters of out time have cultural causes and
consequences