Continuity, Transformation, Change ► Exploring Ways of Marking Time ► Tradition, Modernity, Postmodernity ► Hasn’t this Happened Before?

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Copyright 2012 KenCrest Services. Culture Competence is a set of behaviors, attitudes and policies that come together in a system, agency or among professionals.
Advertisements

Vocabulary culture custom society values government religion legacy.
MODULE 5 Understanding Legal Issues of New Populations Unit 2: Understanding Cultures Building Bridges Across Cultures In Communities.
Historical Themes Historical themes teach students to think conceptually about the American past and focus on historical change over time.
SPICE Themes The five AP World History themes serve as unifying threads through which students can examine broader themes throughout each period.  Themes.
Traditional, Modern And Postmodern Societies
The Social Science Disciplines The Social Sciences are those disciplines that use research and analysis to examine human behaviour. They use such techniques.
What is culture? Class KWL chart.
Intro to Global Foods: Food Patterns and Customs FST10 MacInnes 2014.
1 Socialization Learning to be human Learning elements of one’s culture.
Culture The Elements of Culture. Culture Culture: The way of life of a group of people who share similar beliefs and customs.
(16) CULTURE- The student understands how the components of culture affect the way people live and shape the characteristics of regions. Describe distinctive.
Urban Culture. Introduction Definition Definition Causes Causes Characteristics Characteristics Conclusion Conclusion.
Elements of Culture.
Why is this an example of social change?
Culture Review.
 How old do you think human civilization (history) is?" (not the human species, human civilization)  years. Before that is prehistory, prehistoric.
 Goal One: Historical Tools-The learner will recognize, use, and evaluate the methods and tools valued by historians, compare the views of historians.
Culture What is Culture? Knowledge, attitudes, and behaviors shared and passed on by a group. How do we learn culture? Learned from family, school, peers.
What is Culture?.
Introduction to Mythology Mythos=stories logy=the study of Why study mythology? Myths are humanity’s earliest imaginative attempt to explain the universe,
Introduction to Mythology Mythos=stories logy=the study of Why study mythology? Myths are humanity’s earliest imaginative attempt to explain the universe,
History What is it? Why is history important? How does history change over time? How can we organize history?
Oral Literature Read “The Sun Still Rises in the Same Sky” on pg. 23, and write down four generalizations about American Indian oral tradition.
Modernity Gemeinschaft and Gesellschaft
Global Cultures. Culture The way of life of a group of people who share similar beliefs and customs What languages people speak, what religions they follow,
Themes in World History Questions to ask about a civilization.
CULTURAL DIFFUSION. What is culture?  Unique way a certain group of people live  Lifestyle passed down from generation to generation  Behaviors and.
EXPLORING CULTURE. The shared way of life of a group of people. “Way of life” includes types of foods, types of clothing, values and beliefs, customs,
CULTURES AND SOCIETIES A Quick Reference Guide. QUESTIONS TO CONSIDER All societies are defined by common culture traits which are passed on to the next.
The Pentateuch 4 Traditions of Authorship. Genesis 1-11 Genesis was initially passed on through oral tradition. These stories were told from generation.
Pre-History up to the Reformation. Educational Goal In order to prepare the student for more in depth topics, we are going to explore the beginnings of.
THE 7 ELEMENTS OF CULTURE
Culture Much more than just what makes yogurt curdle.
Social Studies …the easiest and hardest of all the school subjects…
Topic 1 - Roots  All peoples, places and things have sources of origin, or roots.  Timelines are a means of showing, in chronological order, the important.
Modernism refers to the bold new experimental styles and forms that swept the arts during the first part of the twentieth century.  Modernism reflects.
Chapter 26 Processes of Change. Chapter Preview Why Do Cultures Change? How Do Cultures Change? What Is Modernization?
Technology Through Time
NATIVE AMERICAN LITERATURE & FUNCTIONS OF MYTH This is an oral literature that is thousands of years old and was only written down in the past 150 years.
WHAT ARE TRADITIONS? FAMILY, COMMUNITY, AND CULTURE Traditions.
Human Behavior The first step towards Self-discovery
Past Exam Questions Assess different explanations of the extent to which the media influence people’s attitudes and behaviour? (20 marks) Assess different.
Chapter 16, Social Change and Social Movements What is Social Change? Theories of Social Change Global Theories of Social Change Modernization The Causes.
THE ELEMENTS OF CULTURE
Ch. 6 Family, Culture, & Community
Social Studies …the easiest and hardest of all the school subjects…
Copyright © 2015, 2012, 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. All Rights Reserved Personality Sixth edition Chapter 13 Culture, Religion, and Ethnicity.
Time Dating and Components of Culture Lesson 1-1 The Early Ages – Era 1 The Beginnings of Human Society.
The First Nation Peoples’ Experience Past, Present, and Future Beyond Bows and Arrows By Thomas P. Sullivan.
Modernism refers to the bold new experimental styles and forms that swept the arts during the first part of the twentieth century.  Modernism reflects.
CULTURAL DIVERSITY. CULTURE: All the shared products Of human groups MATERIAL CULTURE: Physical objects that People create and use NONMATERIAL CULTURE:
APUSH Themes Identity Work, exchange, and technology Peopling
Vocabulary January 6, Consumerism The belief that it is good for people to spend a lot of money on goods and services.
Basic elements of culture. Anything and everything that makes up a person’s entire way of life is called culture. Definition of Culture.
Introduction to Anthropology Test 1 Review Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved.
ROMANITICISM PASSION IMAGINATION VISION NATURE EMOTION SUBJECTIVITY SUBLIMITY Romanticism An artistic and intellectual movement originating.
Understandings of Identity. Chapter 1 – Thinking About Identity and Ideologies2 To What Extent are Ideology and Identity Interrelated? Question for Inquiry.
5 Themes of AP World History
The Social Studies Disciplines
The Muslim World and Africa (730 B.C.–A.D. 1500)
Worldview A comprehensive view or philosophy of life, the world, and the universe.
5 Themes of World History
Modern World System April 18, 2005.
Native American Literature
CULTURE.
Introduction to Mythology.
5 Themes of AP World History
Types of History To understand our culture and the culture of the past, we must look at history as something more than a mere chronicle of past events.
The Muslim World and Africa (730 B.C.–A.D. 1500)
Presentation transcript:

Continuity, Transformation, Change ► Exploring Ways of Marking Time ► Tradition, Modernity, Postmodernity ► Hasn’t this Happened Before?

Exploring Ways of Marking Time ► Cyclical Time The Life Spiral The Seasons, A Life, Astronomical Time (the Maya Count, Stonehenge, Medicine Wheels)

Exploring the Ways of Marking Time Dreamtime: Origins and Meanings The Dreaming has different meanings for different Aboriginal Australian groups. The Dreaming can be seen as an embodiment of Aboriginal creation which gives meaning to everything. It establishes the rules governing relationships between the people, the land and all things for Aboriginal people. The Role of Oral Tradition Australian Aborigines have the longest cultural history in the world, which some estimate at 65,000 years

Exploring the Ways of Marking Time ► Linear Time Chronicle, Heroic Exploits, and the Right to Rule The Role of Writing Cuneiform in Mesopotamia 3300 BC Hieroglyphs in Egypt 3100 BC

Tradition ► belief, values, way of life: “the passing down of elements of a culture from generation to generation, especially by oral communication.” ► harmony with the past ► tightly knit community and family ► Merriam-Webster Dictionary: 1 : an inherited, established, or customary pattern of thought, action, or behavior (as a religious practice or a social custom) 2 : the handing down of information, beliefs, and customs by word of mouth or by example from one generation to another without written instruction 3 : cultural continuity in social attitudes, customs, and institutions 4 : characteristic manner, method, or style

Modernity ► a 20th century idea, although its roots are in the Industrial Revolution ► related to the idea of progress (which can be traced back at least 2000 years to Classical times) ► goal oriented and developmental (‘underdevelopment’) ► based on transformations in mechanization and factory production (hence Fordism) and changes in society (e.g., gender and family changes)

Modernity ► changes in society (e.g., gender and family changes) ► shift from primarily production to primarily consumption begins for early industrial nations ► alienation from work (make only a component not the total product) ► alienation from family and place ► increasing mobility ► increasing diversity of personal experience ► increasing social problems ► decreasing health ► loss of traditional identities and the search for new ones in a changed world ► increased independence but also responsibility

Modernity ► Merriam-Webster: 1 a: of, relating to, or characteristic of the present or the immediate past: CONTEMPORARY 1 a: of, relating to, or characteristic of the present or the immediate past: CONTEMPORARY 1 b: of, relating to, or characteristic of a period extending from a relevant remote past to the present time 2: involving recent techniques, methods, or ideas : UP-TO-DATE 3: capitalized: of, relating to, or having the characteristics of the present or most recent period of development of a language 4: of or relating to modernism : MODERNIST

Postmodernity ► critique of economic and social conditions brought on by industrialization ► attempt at a return to elements of tradition ► rebellion against unchecked capitalism ► stress on the individual increases and greater need for escape (addiction, religious fervor) ► Merriam-Webster: of, relating to, or being any of several movements (as in art,architecture, or literature) that are reactions against the philosophy and practices of modern movements and are typically marked by revival of traditional elements and techniques of, relating to, or being any of several movements (as in art,architecture, or literature) that are reactions against the philosophy and practices of modern movements and are typically marked by revival of traditional elements and techniques

But Hasn’t this Happened Before? ► The Classical World Hesiod (fl. 700 BC), in Operae et Dies (Works and Days), bemoans how things are falling apart, wishes to return to a truer, simpler time (this is called the Primitivist tradition in Classical scholarship) Ammianus and other writers admire Progress and glorify Roman achievements against the Barbarian tribes (Positivist Tradition in Classical scholarship) ► Our Current World Jihad vs. McWorld Fundamentalists (both Christian and Muslim) decry the debasement of the ‘modern’ world Just as Modernization did, Globalization sweeps away traditions that knit societies together, standardizes what we eat, drive, wear—and eventually–think.

Continuity, Transformation, Change ► A Dialectical Approach: Cancel old ways, Preserve some things from that time, Transcend to a new state ► Studying Continuity, Transformation, and Change in human societies is a core pursuit of Anthropology