Thursday, May 04, 2006

culture

Quick Definition: all products of human thought; breeding of animals or growing of plants; CF. agriculture, horticulture
culture (kŭl'chər) pronunciation
n.
    1. The totality of socially transmitted behavior patterns, arts, beliefs, institutions, and all other products of human work and thought.
    2. These patterns, traits, and products considered as the expression of a particular period, class, community, or population: Edwardian culture; Japanese culture; the culture of poverty.
    3. These patterns, traits, and products considered with respect to a particular category, such as a field, subject, or mode of expression: religious culture in the Middle Ages; musical culture; oral culture.
    4. The predominating attitudes and behavior that characterize the functioning of a group or organization.
  1. Intellectual and artistic activity and the works produced by it.
    1. Development of the intellect through training or education.
    2. Enlightenment resulting from such training or education.
  2. A high degree of taste and refinement formed by aesthetic and intellectual training.
  3. Special training and development: voice culture for singers and actors.
  4. The cultivation of soil; tillage.
  5. The breeding of animals or growing of plants, especially to produce improved stock.
  6. Biology.
    1. The growing of microorganisms, tissue cells, or other living matter in a specially prepared nutrient medium.
    2. Such a growth or colony, as of bacteria.
tr.v., -tured, -turing, -tures.
  1. To cultivate.
    1. To grow (microorganisms or other living matter) in a specially prepared nutrient medium.
    2. To use (a substance) as a medium for culture: culture milk.

[Middle English, cultivation, from Old French, from Latin cultūra, from cultus, past participle of colere. See cultivate.]

USAGE NOTE The application of the term culture to the collective attitudes and behavior of corporations arose in business jargon during the late 1980s and early 1990s. Unlike many locutions that emerge in business jargon, it spread to popular use in newspapers and magazines. Few Usage Panelists object to it. Over 80 percent of Panelists accept the sentence The new management style is a reversal of GE's traditional corporate culture, in which virtually everything the company does is measured in some form and filed away somewhere. Ever since C.P. Snow wrote of the gap between the two cultures (the humanities and science) in the 1950s, the notion that culture can refer to smaller segments of society has seemed implicit. Its usage in the corporate world may also have been facilitated by increased awareness of the importance of genuine cultural differences in a global economy, as between Americans and the Japanese, that have a broad effect on business practices.







culture

noun

  1. The total product of human creativity and intellect: civilization, Kultur. See culture/nature.
  2. Enlightenment and excellent taste resulting from intellectual development: civilization, cultivation, refinement. See culture/nature.

verb

    To prepare (soil) for the planting and raising of crops: cultivate, dress, tend, till, work. See prepared/unprepared, touch/not touch.





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).






culture

The sum of attitudes, customs, and beliefs that distinguishes one group of people from another. Culture is transmitted, through language, material objects, ritual, institutions, and art, from one generation to the next.

  • Anthropologists consider that the requirements for culture (language use, tool making, and conscious regulation of sex) are essential features that distinguish humans from other animals.
  • Culture also refers to refined music, art, and literature; one who is well versed in these subjects is considered cultured.




  • culture (kŭl'chər)
    n.
    1. The growing of microorganisms, tissue cells, or other living matter in a specially prepared nutrient medium.
    2. Such a growth or colony, as of bacteria.
    v., -tured, -turing, -tures.
    1. To grow microorganisms or other living matter in a specially prepared nutrient medium.
    2. To use a substance as a medium for culture.




    culture

    (DOD, NATO) A feature of the terrain that has been constructed by man. Included are such items as roads, buildings, and canals; boundary lines; and, in a broad sense, all names and legends on a map.





    Note: click on a word meaning below to see its connections and related words.

    The noun culture has 7 meanings:

    Meaning #1: a particular society at a particular time and place
    Synonyms: civilization, civilisation

    Meaning #2: the tastes in art and manners that are favored by a social group

    Meaning #3: all the knowledge and values shared by a society
    Synonym: acculturation

    Meaning #4: (biology) the growing of microorganisms in a nutrient medium (such as gelatin or agar)

    Meaning #5: (bacteriology) the product of cultivating micro-organisms in a nutrient medium

    Meaning #6: a highly developed state of perfection; having a flawless or impeccable quality
    Synonyms: polish, refinement, cultivation, finish

    Meaning #7: the raising of plants or animals






    culture

    The word culture, from the Latin colo, -ere, with its root meaning to cultivate, generally refers to patterns of human activity and the symbolic structures that give such activity significance. Different definitions of culture reflect different theoretical bases for understanding, or criteria for evaluating, human activity. Anthropologists most commonly use the term culture to refer to the universal human capacity to classify, codify and communicate their experiences symbolically. This capacity is taken as a defining feature of the genus Homo, though Jane Goodall (The Chimpanzees of Gombe: Patterns of Behavior, 1986) identified aspects of culture among our closest relatives.

    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].

    The two definitions stated above, as well as many others, offer a laundry list of things that comprise culture. The list items are treated as objects with an existence and life-line of their own. For example, a law, a stone tool, a marriage, come into space-time at one set of coordinates and go out of it another. While here, they change, so that one may speak of the evolution of the law or the tool.

    A culture, then, is by definition at least a set of cultural objects. Leslie White asked, what sort of objects are they? Are they physical objects? Mental objects? Both? Metaphors? Symbols? Reifications? In Science of Culture, published in 1949, he finally concluded that they are objects sui generis, of their own kind. In trying to capture what that kind is, he hit upon a previously unrealized aspect of symbolization, which he called the symbolate. He then defined culture as

    symbolates understood in an extra-somatic context.

    The key to this definition is the discovery of the symbolate. The reader is invited to the article on symbol for further presentation.

    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 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 lite 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-lites as just as cultured as lites (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 lites to popular or pop culture, meaning goods and activities produced for, and consumed by, non-lite people or the masses. (Note that some classifications relegate both high and low cultures to the status of subcultures.)

    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 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 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 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 Wikipdia.

    Cultural change

    Cultures, by predisposition, both embrace and resist change dependence of culture traits. For example, men and women have complementary roles in many cultures. One sex might desire changes that affect the other, as happened in the second half of the 20th century in western cultures.

    Cultural change can come about due to the environment, to inventions (and other internal influences), and to contact with other cultures. For example, the end of the last ice age helped lead to the invention of agriculture, which in its turn brought about many cultural innovations.

    In diffusion, the form of something moves from one culture to another, but not its meaning. For example, hamburgers, mundane in the United States, seemed exotic when introduced into China. Stimulus diffusion refers to an element of one culture leading to an invention in another. Diffusions of innovations theory presents a research-based model for why and when individuals and cultures adopt new ideas, practices, and products.

    Acculturation has different meanings, but in this context refers to replacement of the traits of one culture with those of another, such as happened to certain Native American tribes and to many indigenous peoples across the globe during the process of colonization.

    Related processes on an individual level include assimilation (adoption of a different culture by an individual) and transculturation.

    Cultural invention has come to mean any innovation that is new and found to be useful to a group of people and expressed in their behaviour but which does not exist as a physical object.

    Cultural studies

    Cultural studies developed in the late 20th century, in part through the re-introduction of Marxist thought into sociology, and in part through the articulation of sociology and other academic disciplines such as literary criticism. This movement aimed to focus on the analysis of subcultures in capitalist societies. Following the non-anthropological tradition, cultural studies generally focus on the study of consumption goods (such as fashion, art, and literature). Because the 18th- and 19th-century distinction between high and low culture seems inappropriate to apply to the mass-produced and mass-marketed consumption goods which cultural studies analyses, these scholars refer instead to popular culture.

    Today, some anthropologists have joined the project of cultural studies. Most, however, reject the identification of culture with consumption goods. Furthermore, many now reject the notion of culture as bounded, and consequently reject the notion of subculture. Instead, they see culture as a complex web of shifting patterns that link people in different locales and that link social formations of different scales. According to this view, any group can construct its own cultural identity.

    Sample list of cultures

    Cultures of contemporary countries and regions

    Main article: List of national culture articles.


    Contemporary local cultures

    Other contemporary cultures

    Historic cultures

    References

    • Arnold, Matthew, Culture and Anarchy, 1882. Macmillan and Co., New York. Online at [3].
    • Bourdieu, Pierre. Outline of a Theory of Practice. 1977.
    • Cohen, Anthony P. The Symbolic Construction of Community. Routledge: New York, 1995 (1985).
    • Geertz, Clifford. (1973). The Interpretation of Cultures: Selected Essays. New York. ISBN 0465097197.
    • Hoult, Thomas Ford, ed. (1969). Dictionary of Modern Sociology. Totowa, New Jersey, United States: Littlefield, Adams Co.
    • Keiser, R. Lincoln (1969). The Vice Lords: Warriors of the Streets. Holt, Rinehart, and Winston. ISBN 0-03-080361-6. Keiser's quotation from Geertz (p. viii) is cited from Geertz, C., 1957, Ritual and Social Change: A Javanese Example, American Anthropologist, Vol. 59, No. 1. p. 33-34.
    • Kroeber, A. L. and C. Kluckhohn, 1952. Culture: A Critical Review of Concepts and Definitions. Peabody Museum, Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States.
    • Middleton, Richard (1990/2002). Studying Popular Music. Philadelphia: Open University Press. ISBN 0335152759.
    • Cultural Anthropology Tutorials, Behavioral Sciences Department, Palomar College, San Marco, California, United States, as of December 12, 2004.
    • UNESCO, UNESCO Universal Declaration on Cultural Diversity, issued on International Mother Language Day, February 21, 2002.

    See also

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    Translations for: Culture

    Nederlands (Dutch)
    cultuur, kweek, verbouw, cultuur-

    Franais (French)
    culture, civilisation, faire une culture

    Deutsch (German)
    n. - Kultur, Zucht
    v. - kultivieren

    ή (Greek)
    n. έ, ύ, ό, ί, (.) έ (ί ..) v. ώ (ί, ύ)

    Italiano (Italian)
    coltura, cultura, culturale

    Portugus (Portuguese)
    n. - cultura (f)
    v. - cultivar

    Русский (Russian)
    культивация, культура

    Espaol (Spanish)
    n. - cultivo, cra, cultura, cultural
    v. tr. - cultivar, educar, refinar

    Svenska (Swedish)
    n. - kultur, (andlig) odling, odling, kultur (biol.)
    v. - odla

    中国话 (Simplified Chinese)
    n. - 文化, 耕种, 修养
    v. tr. - 耕种, 使有教养

    中國話 (Traditional Chinese)
    n. - 文化, 耕種, 修養
    v. tr. - 耕種, 使有教養

    日本語 (Japanese)
    n. - 文化, 教養, 訓練, 養殖, 培養
    v. - 培養する

    العربيه (Arabic)
    (الاسم) ثقافه, تربيه, تراث, زرع بكتيري لاكتشاف المرض (فعل) ثقف

    עברית (Hebrew)‬
    n. - ‮תרבות, תרבית, פיתוח, עיבוד, גידול בעל-חיים, תירבות, גידול צמחים‬
    v. tr. - ‮החזיק בתנאים נאותים לצמיחה, עיבד, תרבת‬