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Culture - Defining culture

Culture - Defining culture: Encyclopedia II - Culture - Defining culture

Different definitions of culture reflect different theories for understanding - or criteria for evaluating - human activity. Sir Edward B. Tylor wrote in 1871 that "culture or civilization, taken in its wide ethnographic sense, is that complex whole which includes knowledge, belief, art, morals, law, custom, and any other capabilities and habits acquired by man as a member of society", while a 2002 document from the United Nations agency UNESCO states that culture is the "set of distinctive spiritual, material, intellectual and ...

See also:

Culture, Culture - Defining culture, Culture - Culture as values norms and artifacts, Culture - Culture as civilization, Culture - Culture as worldview, Culture - Culture as patterns of products and activities, Culture - Culture as symbols, Culture - Culture as stabilizing mechanism, Culture - Cultural change, Culture - Propagating culture, Culture - Cultural studies, Culture - Sample list of cultures, Culture - Cultures of contemporary countries and regions, Culture - Contemporary local cultures, Culture - Other contemporary cultures, Culture - Historic cultures

Culture, Culture - Contemporary local cultures, Culture - Cultural change, Culture - Cultural studies, Culture - Culture as civilization, Culture - Culture as patterns of products and activities, Culture - Culture as stabilizing mechanism, Culture - Culture as symbols, Culture - Culture as values norms and artifacts, Culture - Culture as worldview, Culture - Cultures of contemporary countries and regions, Culture - Defining culture, Culture - Historic cultures, Culture - Other contemporary cultures, Culture - Propagating culture, Culture - Sample list of cultures, Acculturation, Cross-cultural communication, Cultural bias - cultural diversity - cultural evolution - cultural imperialism, Culture theory - Culture war - Culture jamming, Dominator culture, European Capital of Culture — city chosen by the European Union for a year at a time to showcase its cultural life, Kulturkampf — a specific cultural fight in 1870s Germany, Organizational culture, World Values Survey, Free Culture Movement

Culture: Encyclopedia II - Culture - Defining culture



Culture - Defining culture

Different definitions of culture reflect different theories for understanding - or criteria for evaluating - human activity.

Sir Edward B. Tylor wrote in 1871 that "culture or civilization, taken in its wide ethnographic sense, is that complex whole which includes knowledge, belief, art, morals, law, custom, and any other capabilities and habits acquired by man as a member of society", while a 2002 document from the United Nations agency UNESCO states that culture is the "set of distinctive spiritual, material, intellectual and emotional features of society or a social group, and that it encompasses, in addition to art and literature, lifestyles, ways of living together, value systems, traditions and beliefs". UNESCO, 2002 While these two definitions range widely, they do not exhaust the many uses of this concept - in 1952 Alfred Kroeber and Clyde Kluckhohn compiled a list of more than 200 different definitions of culture in their book, Culture: A Critical Review of Concepts and Definitions [Kroeber and Kluckhohn, 1952].

Culture - Culture as values norms and artifacts

A common way of understanding culture sees it as consisting of three elements:

  1. values
  2. norms
  3. artifacts.

(See Dictionary of Modern Sociology, 1969, 93, cited at [1]) Values comprise ideas about what in life seems important. They guide the rest of the culture. Norms consist of expectations of how people will behave in different situations. Each culture has different methods, called sanctions, of enforcing its norms. Sanctions vary with the importance of the norm; norms that a society enforces formally have the status of laws. Artifacts — things, or material culture — derive from the culture's values and norms.

Julian Huxley gives a slightly different division, into inter-related "mentifacts", "socifacts" and "artifacts", for ideological, sociological, and technological subsystems respectively. Socialization, in Huxley's view, depends on the belief subsystem. The sociological subsystem governs interaction between people. Material objects and their use make up the technological subsystem. [2]

As a rule, archeologists focus on material culture whereas cultural anthropologists focus on symbolic culture, although ultimately both groups maintain interests in the relationships between these two dimensions. Moreover, anthropologists understand "culture" to refer not only to consumption goods, but to the general processes which produce such goods and give them meaning, and to the social relationships and practices in which such objects and processes become embedded.

Culture - Culture as civilization

Many people today use a conception of "culture" that developed in Europe during the 18th and early 19th centuries. This idea of culture then reflected inequalities within European societies, and between European powers and their colonies around the world. It identifies "culture" with "civilization" and contrasts the combined concept with "nature". According to this thinking, one can classify some countries as more civilized than others, and some people as more cultured than others. Thus some cultural theorists have actually tried to eliminate popular or mass culture from the definition of culture. Theorists like Matthew Arnold (1822-1888) or the Leavises regard culture as simply the result of "the best that has been thought and said in the world” (Arnold, 1960: 6); Arnold contrasted culture with social chaos or anarchy. On this account, culture links closely with social cultivation: the progressive refinement of human behavior. Arnold consistently uses the word this way: "...culture being a pursuit of our total perfection by means of getting to know, on all the matters which most concern us, the best which has been thought and said in the world". Arnold, 1882

In practice, culture referred to élite goods and activities such as haute cuisine, high fashion or haute couture, museum-caliber art and classical music, and the word cultured described people who knew about, and took part in, these activities. For example, someone who used 'culture' in the sense of 'cultivation' might argue that classical music "is" more refined than music produced by working-class people such as punk rock or than the indigenous music traditions of aboriginal peoples of Australia.

People who use "culture" in this way tend not to use it in the plural as "cultures". They do not believe that distinct cultures exist, each with their own internal logic and values; but rather that only a single standard of refinement suffices, against which one can measure all groups. Thus, according to this worldview, people with different customs from those who regard themselves as cultured do not usually count as "having a different culture"; but class as "uncultured". People lacking "culture" often seemed more "natural", and observers often defended (or criticized) elements of high culture for repressing "human nature".

From the 18th century onwards, some social critics have accepted this contrast between cultured and uncultured, but have stressed the interpretation of refinement and of sophistication as corrupting and unnatural developments which obscure and distort people's essential nature. On this account, folk music (as produced by working-class people) honestly expresses a natural way of life, and classical music seems superficial and decadent. Equally, this view often portrays non-Western people as 'noble savages' living authentic unblemished lives, uncomplicated and uncorrupted by the highly-stratified capitalist systems of the West.

Today most social scientists reject the monadic conception of culture, and the opposition of culture to nature. They recognize non-élites as just as cultured as élites (and non-Westerners as just as civilized) - simply regarding them as just cultured in a different way. Thus social observers contrast the "high" culture of élites to "popular" or pop culture, meaning goods and activities produced for, and consumed by, non-élite people or the masses. (Note that some classifications relegate both high and low cultures to the status of subcultures.)

Culture - Culture as worldview

During the Romantic era, scholars in Germany, especially those concerned with nationalist movements - such as the nationalist struggle to create a "Germany" out of diverse principalities, and the nationalist struggles by ethnic minorities against the Austro-Hungarian Empire - developed a more inclusive notion of culture as "worldview". In this mode of thought, a distinct and incommensurable world view characterizes each ethnic group. Although more inclusive than earlier views, this approach to culture still allowed for distinctions between "civilized" and "primitive" or "tribal" cultures.

By the late 19th century, anthropologists had adopted and adapted the term culture to a broader definition that they could apply to a wider variety of societies. Attentive to the theory of evolution, they assumed that all human beings evolved equally, and that the fact that all humans have cultures must in some way result from human evolution. They also showed some reluctance to use biological evolution to explain differences between specific cultures - an approach that either exemplified a form of, or legitimized forms of, racism. They believed that biological evolution would produce a most inclusive notion of culture, a concept that anthropologists could apply equally to non-literate and to literate societies, or to nomadic and to sedentary societies. They argued that through the course of their evolution, human beings evolved a universal human capacity to classify experiences, and to encode and communicate them symbolically. Since human individuals learned and taught these symbolic systems, the systems began to develop independently of biological evolution (in other words, one human being can learn a belief, value, or way of doing something from another, even if the two humans do not share a biological relationship). That this capacity for symbolic thinking and social learning stems from human evolution confounds older arguments about nature versus nurture. Thus Clifford Geertz (1973: 33 ff.) has argued that human physiology and neurology developed in conjunction with the first cultural activities, and Middleton (1990: 17 n.27) concluded that human "'instincts' were culturally formed".

People living apart from one another develop unique cultures, but elements of different cultures can easily spread from one group of people to another. Culture changes dynamically and people can (must?) teach and learn culture, making it a potentially rapid form of adaptation to change in physical conditions. Anthropologists view culture as not only as a product of biological evolution but as a supplement to it, as the main means of human adaptation to the world.

This view of culture as a symbolic system with adaptive functions, and one which varies from place to place, led anthropologists to conceive of different cultures as defined by distinct patterns (or structures) of enduring, arbitrary, conventional sets of meaning, which took concrete form in a variety of artifacts such as myths and rituals, tools, the design of housing, and the planning of villages. Anthropologists thus distinguish between material culture and symbolic culture, not only because each reflects different kinds of human activity, but also because they constitute different kinds of data that require different methodologies. Since at lest the 1980s, many archaeologists (Ian Hodder, for example) have argued that these two types of culture cannot be separated but that much of a societiy's symbolic culture is communicated and expressed through its material culture.

This view of culture, which came to dominate between World War I and World War II, implied that each culture had bounds and demanded interpretation as a whole, on its own terms. There resulted a belief in cultural relativism; the belief that one had to understand an individual's actions in terms of his or her culture; that one had to understand a specific cultural artifact (a ritual, for example) in terms of the larger symbolic system of which it forms a part.

Nevertheless, the belief that culture comprises symbolical codes and can thus pass via teaching from one person to another meant that cultures, although bounded, would change. Cultural change could result from invention and innovation, but it could also result from contact between two cultures. Under peaceful conditions, contact between two cultures can lead to people "borrowing" (really, learning) from one another (diffusion or transculturation). Under conditions of violence or political inequality, however, people of one society can "steal" cultural artifacts from another, or impose cultural artifacts on another (acculturation). Diffusion of innovations theory presents a research-based model for how, when and why people adopt new ideas.

All human societies have participated in these processes of diffusion, transculturation, and acculturation, and few anthropologists today see cultures as bounded. Modern anthropologists argue that instead of understanding a cultural artifact in terms of its own culture, one needs to understand it in terms of a broader history involving contact and relations with other cultures.

In addition to the aforementioned processes, migration on a major scale has characterized the world, particularly since the days of Columbus. Phenomena such as colonial expansion and forced migration through slavery became prominent. As a result, many societies have become culturally heterogeneous. Some anthropologists have argued nevertheless that some unifying cultural system bound heterogeneous societies, and that it offers advantages to understand heterogenous elements as subcultures. Others have argued that no unifying or coordinating cultural system exists, and that one must understand heterogeneous elements together as forming a multicultural society. The spread of the doctrine of multiculturalism has coincided with a resurgence of identity politics, which involve demands for the recognition of social subgroups' cultural uniqueness.

Sociobiologists argue that observers can best understand many aspects of culture in the light of the concept of the meme, first introduced by Richard Dawkins in his 1976 book The Selfish Gene. Dawkins suggests the existence of units of culture - memes - roughly analogous to genes in evolutionary biology. Although this view has gained some popular currency, anthropologists generally reject it.

Culture - Culture as patterns of products and activities

In the early 20th century, anthropologists understood culture to refer not to a set of discrete products or activities (whether material or symbolic) but rather to underlying patterns of products and activities. Moreover, they assumed that such patterns had clear bounds (thus, some people confuse "culture" with the society that has a particular culture).

Geertz distinguishes between culture and social system: "…the former is an ordered system of meanings and symbols in terms of which social interaction takes place; …the latter… [is] the pattern of social interaction itself." (Keiser, 1969:viii)

In the case of smaller societies, in which people merely fell into categories of age, gender, household and descent group, anthropologists believed that people more-or-less shared the same set of values and conventions. In the case of larger societies, in which people undergo further categorization by region, race, ethnicity, and class, anthropologists came to believe that members of the same society often had highly contrasting values and conventions. They thus used the term subculture to identify the cultures of parts of larger societies. Since subcultures reflect the position of a segment of society vis a vis other segments and the society as a whole, they often reveal processes of domination and resistance.

The 20th century also saw the popularization of the idea of corporate culture - distinct and malleable within the context of an employing organization or of a workplace.

Culture - Culture as symbols

The symbolic view of culture, the legacy of Clifford Geertz (1973) and Victor Turner (1967), holds symbols to be both the practices of social actors and the context that gives such practices meaning. Anthony P. Cohen (1985) writes of the "symbolic gloss" which allows social actors to use common symbols to communicate and understand each other while still imbuing these symbols with personal significance and meanings. Symbols provide the limits of cultured thought. Members of a culture rely on these symbols to frame their thoughts and expressions in intelligible terms. In short, symbols make culture possible, reproducible and readable. They are the "webs of significance" in Weber's sense that, to quote Pierre Bourdieu (1977), "give regularity, unity and systematicity to the practices of a group...".

Culture - Culture as stabilizing mechanism

Modern cultural theory also considers the possibility that (a) culture itself is a product of stabilization tendencies inherent in evolutionary pressures toward self-similarity and self-cognition of societies as wholes, or tribalisms. See Steven Wolfram "A new kind of science" on iterated simple algorithms from genetic unfolding, from which the concept of culture as an operating mechanism can be developed, and Richard Dawkins "The extended phenotype" for discussion of genetic and memetic stability over time, through negative feedback mechanisms, such as Wikipedia.

Other related archives

"popular" or pop culture, artifacts, norms, values, A new kind of science, Acculturation, Albania, Alfred Kroeber, Alliance française, Angola, Assyro-Babylonian culture, Australia, Austro-Hungarian Empire, Belgium, Bhutan, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Brazil, British Council, Bulgaria, Canada, Cassette culture, Cemetery H culture, Central America, Chile, China, Clifford Geertz, Clovis culture, Columbus, Cross-cultural communication, Cultural bias, Cultural studies, Culture jamming, Culture of New York City, Culture of Stockholm, Culture of Sydney, Culture theory, Culture war, Deaf culture, Denmark, Diffusion of innovations, Diffusions of innovations, Dominator culture, Drug culture, Egypt, England, Esperanto culture, Europe, European Capital of Culture, European Union, Families, Finland, France, Free Culture Movement, Fulbright Program, Georgia, Germany, Gibraltar, Goethe-Institut, Greece, Hacker culture, Homo, Hong Kong, Hungary, Ian Hodder, India, Indonesia, Indus Valley Culture, Instituto Cervantes, Ireland, Iron Age, Israel, Italy, Jane Goodall, Japan, Jersey, Julian Huxley, Korea, Kulturkampf, Kuwait, La Tene culture, Latin, List of national culture articles, Lithuania, Macedonia, Maori culture, Marxist, Matthew Arnold, Mediterranean, Mexico, Native American, Natufian culture, Netherlands, New Zealand, North America, North Korea, Northern Ireland, Organizational culture, Paideia, Pakistan, Peru, Political culture of Canada, Portugal, Quebec, Queer culture, Richard Dawkins, Romanitas, Romantic era, Russia, Scotland, Serbia, Sir Edward B. Tylor, South Africa, South Korea, Spain, Steven Wolfram, Sweden, Switzerland, The Selfish Gene, Turkey, UNESCO, Underground culture, United Kingdom, United States, Wales, Weimar culture, Western, Western culture, Wikipedia, Working-class culture, World Values Survey, World War I, World War II, Youth culture, acculturation, adaptation, age, agriculture, anthropologists, archeologists, art, articulation, assimilation, authentic, capitalist, change, civilization, class, classical music, colonial expansion, colonization, consumption goods, corporate culture, cultural anthropologists, cultural artifact, cultural diversity, cultural evolution, cultural identity, cultural imperialism, cultural relativism, cultural studies, diffusion, domination, education, ethnicity, evolution, evolutionary biology, fashion, folk music, gender, hamburgers, haute couture, haute cuisine, high, high culture, human nature, ice age, identity politics, innovation, invention, laws, lifestyles, literary criticism, literature, logic, low cultures, masses, meaning, meme, memetic, monadic, multicultural, multiculturalism, museum, myths, nationalist, nature, nature versus nurture, negative feedback, noble savages, organization, patterns, peer-groups, punk rock, race, racism, religion, resistance, ritual, rituals, slavery, sociology, subculture, subcultures, symbolic, symbolically, the Leavises, the West, tools, tourism, transculturation, tribalisms, values, western cultures, workplace, worldview, élite, élites



Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Defining culture", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki

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