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Published byClarence Bates Modified over 6 years ago
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What is culture A people’s way of life, their behavior, their shared understandings about themselves and the world Regions an area of a common characteristics Aspects of culture are some of the best features we can use to define regions
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CULTURAL LANDSCAPE Each culture has a cultural landscape that develops from the modifications which they have made on their environment to meet specific needs, technology, and lifestyle. What are the defining characteristics of Towson’ cultural landscape
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Regions Used to identify and organize areas of the world
Area characterized by similarity or cohesiveness that sets it apart from other regions.
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Geographic Defining of a Region
Use of cultural traits to define a cultural region REGIONAL IDENTITY = Key component the inhabitants of the region are aware of the commonalities in the region and its difference from other regions
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Common Characteristic
(1) Geographic Proximity = North America
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Common Characteristic
(2)Dominant Crop = Corn Belt
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Common Characteristic
(3) Prevailing Livelihood = Manufacturing (Rust) Belt
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Common Characteristic
(4) Common History = South
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Common Characteristic
(5) Common Set of Trading Partners = European Union
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Regions = Mental Construct
Conceptualizing a region is a method for geographers to impose order on the messy complexities of the real world An attempt to make sense out of geographic chaos
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Three levels of Regional Influence
(1) core – the centralized zone of concentration, or the most pure area that posses all of the cultural traits used to define the region
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Three levels of Regional Influence
(2) domain – the area in which the particular culture is dominant but less intense
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Three levels of Regional Influence
(3) sphere – the zone of outer influence where people with the culture traits in question can even be a minority within another culture region.
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Two things to remember (1) One culture’s core can lie with another culture’s sphere
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Two things to remember (2) transitions between core, domain, and sphere can be gradual and abrupt
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Syncretism New cultural traits emerge as a cultural hybrid of two distinct parent traits
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Various Different Classifications
Formal Region Functional (Nodal) Region Perceptual (Vernacular) Region
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Formal Region Common human characteristic (language, religion, level of economic development) OR The Definition of a Formal Region Can be affected by Scale
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Formal Region Common physical attribute such as climate, landform, or vegetation The Definition of a Formal Region Can be affected by Scale
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Formal Region DAIRY BELT – single human characteristic
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Formal Region Latin America – common location and colonial heritage to Spain or Portugal Multiple Traits
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Functional (Nodal) Regions
Product of interactions of the people and movement of various kinds Spatial system… defined by the limits of that system Function through political, social, and economic interaction
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Functional (Nodal) Regions
There is a center or node around which ideas are organized Newspaper circulation area Television reception area Department Store Clientele Technology Breaking Down Functional Regions
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MEGALOPOLIS Coalescence of metropolitan areas into a continuous network of urban development Blurs the line between functional and formal regions
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MEGALOPOLIS Both functional and formal
Declining influence of geographic proximity
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Perceptual Region Intellectual constructs designed to help us understand the nature and distribution of phenomena in human geography Issue of debate amongst geographers
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Perceptual Region Based on people’s feelings or beliefs about the area
Subjective in nature Nine Nations of North America
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Perceptual Region Place that people believe exist due to a common cultural identity People think of the South Environmental, cultural, and economic features quite distinct from the rest of the country Economically – high agricultural production and lower graduation rates Cultural – conservative, Church – going, rural Environment – more rain in the winter than summer
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Vernacular Regions One type of perceptual region which is identified by the local residents… not the perception of outsiders Vernacular = traits of the common folk (speech, architecture, dress, food, etc.)
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Regionalization in Globalized World
Many expressions of regional uniqueness are reactions to the homogenized consumer oriented placeless characteristics of a global economy
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