Chapter 3 Questions

1.  Define Culture

2.  True or False

A.  We are born with the information we need to survive: False

B.  Culture is essential for our individual survival and communication with others: True

C.  It establishes our laws and rules for interaction: True

3.  Society and culture are interdependent. Explain

Reliant on one another…society creates the components of culture, they are created out of a need / belief / value / change in social structure, i.e. rights of women, religious observation, etc.

4.  What is the difference between Nature vs. Nurture?

Nature means natural to you (Biological) Nurture is practice or social (Environmental)

5.  What is the difference between an instinct, a reflex and a drive?

Biologically determined; common to all members in a cultural environment

Biologically determined; involuntary response

Biologically determined impulses that satisfy a need.

6.  Define Material Culture and non-material culture. Give examples.

Physical artifacts vs. non-tangible characteristics, i.e. language, beliefs, etc.

7.  Draw a diagram of MASLOW’S HIERARCHY OF NEEDS.

8.  What is the Central component of nonmaterial culture?

Beliefs

9.  Who came up with the idea of Cultural universals?

George Murdoch

10.  What are Cultural Universals and give examples.

Body adornment

Hair/fashion

Sports, games

Family, law, religion

Customs

11.  State two PROs and two CONs of Cultural Universals.

Ensures smooth operation of society/ Meets needs, settles disputes

Imposed / Repression

12.  What are the 8 components of culture?

Components of Culture

n  Symbols

n  Language

n  Values

n  Norms

n  Folkways

n  Mores

n  Laws

n  Beliefs

13.  What are symbols?

Anything that meaningfully represents something else

14.  What is language? Name the two kinds.

A set of symbols that express ideas and enable people to think and communicate with one another

Kinds:

a.  Verbal

b.  Nonverbal such as written or in gestures

15.  Explain the Sapir-Whorf hypothesis.

language shapes reality

16.  Explain how language can impact ideas about gender.

Exclusive language – English language ignores women with words like mankind and chairman

Often he or she denotes occupations – Doctors are usually referred to he and teachers as she

Often gendered language connotes positions of power

Predisposition to think of females in sexual terms – broad, fox, bitch, babe, doll (childlike or petlike characteristics)

Men have performance pressure and sexual prowess placed on them – stud, jock, hunk, dude

17.  Explain how language can impact ideas about race and ethnicity.

Language may create and reinforce our perceptions about race and ethnicity by transmitting preconceived ideas about the superiority of one category of people over another

18.  What are Values?

n  Collective ideas about what is right or wrong, good or bad, and desirable or undesirable in a particular culture

n  They provide the criteria for evaluating people, objects and events

19.  Name the core values of Canadians.

Equity and fairness

Canada’s world image (freedom, peace, non-violent change)

Compassion and generosity

Accommodation and tolerance

Consultation and dialogue in settling differences

Canada’s natural beauty

Support for diversity

20.  What is Value Contradictions?

n  Values that conflict with one another or are mutually exclusive

n  For example, people believe that the poor should have adequate living, yet vote in governments which are not in accord with this value

21.  What is the difference between Real Culture and Ideal Culture? Give examples

Ideal: values and standards of behaviour that people in a society profess to hold

Real: the values and standards of behaviour that people actually follow

–  We may claim to law abiding citizens but smoke marijuana

–  We may drive over the speed limit but think of ourselves as good citizens.

22.  What are norms?

Established rules of behaviour or standards of conduct

23.  Explain the difference between Prescriptive, proscriptive, formal, sanctions and informal norms.

  1. Prescriptive: what behaviour is appropriate (example: to pay taxes)
  2. Proscriptive: what behaviour is not appropriate
  3. Formal: written down as laws
  4. Sanctions: rewards for appropriate behaviour and punishment for inappropriate behaviour
  5. Informal: Unwritten standards of behaviour understood by people who share a common identity

24.  What are folkways? Examples.

Those informal norms or everyday customs that may be violated without serious consequences within a particular culture

Examples: brushing teeth, kinds of clothes, gestures, religious fasting, kinds of cars we buy, kinds of houses we live in

25.  What are Mores and Taboos?

strongly held norms with moral and ethical connotations that may or may not be violated without serious consequences in a particular culture

Taboos: So strong that their violation is considered to be extremely offensive

Example: sexual bonding between close kin

26.  What are laws? State the 2 types of law in Canadian society.

Formal, standardized norms that have been enacted by legislatures and are enforced by formal sanctions

Examples: in Canada, the taboo of incest is illegal

Types:

h.  Civil: deals with disputes between people

i.  Criminal: deals with public safety and well-being