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What is Culture?

Cultural studies is an emerging field that falls under the rubric of multi-disciplinary or interdisciplinary studies. Cultural studies focuses on culture. Culture is defined in various ways, but generally includes: group knowledge, beliefs, values, experiences, religion, philosophies, beliefs about the universe, belongings, notions of property, traditions, beliefs about time, social roles, gender roles, ways of conceptualizing spatial relationships, symbols, meanings, attitudes, and hierarchies. Culture refers to group beliefs, but it can refer to a broad group, such as a national culture, or a smaller sub-group that exists within the larger group.

In many ways, culture refers to daily life and how groups of people live their daily lives. Therefore, culture is not a static concept, but a changing concept, which evolves for various reasons. Technology, immigration, emigration, changing gender norms, and scientific advances are just a few of the variables that can drive cultural change. Moreover, people experience several layers of culture: national, regional, religious, gender, generational, social class, racial, educational, and workplace are all common layers of culture, all of which may impact the individual in different, sometimes conflicting, ways.

Cultural determinism is a theory that culture is transmitted through learned values, beliefs, ideas, and meanings, and that this learned culture determines human nature. While this theory would seem to limit human ability because people learn what it means to be human from their surrounding culture, it actually suggests no limitations on human ability; as long as people can learn behaviors, they can change. However, it also suggests that conditioning is extremely powerful and that while people can make changes after being exposed to different cultures, those changes are unlikely because they have already been conditioned to accept one version of humanity.

Cultural relativism takes the view that no culture is superior to any other culture. Therefore, no society can be considered normative. This position is relevant to members of all cultures, because, since ethics and morals are culturally-based, it suggests that there are not only no universal ethical or moral systems, but also that all ethical and moral systems are inherently equal. Cultural relativism is also known as pluralism and tolerance.

In contrast to cultural relativism, cultural ethnocentrism is a belief that one’s culture is superior to other cultures. This belief can be overt and conscious, where it manifests as overt bigotry, racism, and xenophobia, but it can also be subtle and unconscious, with people judging other people’s cultures by referencing their own culturally-defined values and morals. It is very difficult to be completely objective, but being aware of how your own cultural influences have shaped how you view other cultures is one way to be more tolerant. Gaining information about other cultural practices and why they occur is another way to reduce cultural ethnocentrism.

Learning about culture involves studying many different areas. Earning a cultural studies degree generally involves studying: art, language, gender relationships, families, marriage, laws, philosophy, literature, history, sociology, and communication. Cultural studies majors learn to analyze and critique culture using several methodologies and theories, including: ethnography, class theory, deconstruction, gender theory, and semiotics[ Show Less ]

 

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Literary analysis and critique of authorial perspective and argumentation
Kamper advocates the viewpoint that Native Americans can unite under a collective force to benefit from organizations like labor unions. After reviewing relevant evidence to this premise, the reviewer whole heartedly agrees with the author. However, for such an enterprise to become a success, cultural nuances for these people must be ironed out.
Paper Undergraduate
The clash of civilizations by Samuel Huntington
Huntington wrote a paper in 1992 that set the stage for a new era in political discourse. In this article, Huntington makes the argument that the end of the cold war has entered in a new period in which ideological or…
Thesis Undergraduate
What Is the Importance of Play in Early Childhood?
This essay discusses with regard to the idea of play and the significance it plays in children's development. With many individuals being inclined to associate play with childish behavior and with a general idea that contrasts work and seriosity, a great deal of children risk losing important cognitive abilities they would have developed while playing.
Paper Undergraduate
Homeland Security and Emergency Management
Richard, I appreciate your comments and strongly resonate with your ideas about the individual and his responsibility to save himself. I think others need to adopt the approach the we have taken on this idea and derive…
Paper Undergraduate
Culture and Marketing Strategy
The paper looks at the concept of marketing from the cultural aspect of it. It picks adn example of an advertisement online that tries to convince the potential consumers of the need to consume their product. The advertisement is analyzed on the lines of whether it takes into account the cultural aspect of the consumers or not.
Research Paper Doctorate
How They Construct Identity in Words
Gricean principles are very reflective of the meanings people give to their own words when they describe themselves and their potential mate in personals ads. Gricean principles insist that culturally we represent more…
Research Paper Doctorate
Angola Portugal Treated the People of Angola
Portugal treated the people of Angola with contempt and indifference for five centuries of colonization. From as early as the 1400s to the 20th century, the Africans under the Portuguese rule only knew of slavery,…
Research Paper Doctorate
Decision Making Ethics Is a Philosophical Term
Ethics is a philosophical term derived from the Greek word "ethos," meaning character or custom (Sims, 1994, p. 16). Ethics, therefore, is not just an ethereal concept belonging to the domain of philosophers and…
Research Paper Doctorate
Utilitarianism, as a Moral System, Is Basically
Utilitarianism, as a moral system, is basically one in which one creates a moral and ethical system based not in each specific action having an essential moral component in and of itself, but in terms of defining the…
Research Paper Doctorate
Programming languages: concepts, features, and applications
To give an introduction to programming languages, we can state that a language that explains the modification and control of another program that already exist is called a Program language.