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Cultural Patterns and Processes
Culture: The mix of values, beliefs, behaviors, and material objects that form a peoples’ way of life.
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Geographers’ view of culture:
way that culture affects the natural environment the spatial organization that culture stimulates
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Two types of culture 1. Non-material culture—abstract concepts a. values: culturally defined standards that guide the way people assess desirability, goodness, & beauty, and that serve as guidelines for moral living
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b. beliefs: specific statements that people hold to be true, almost always based on values
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c. behaviors—actions that people take
based on values and beliefs as reflected in norms
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2. Material culture concrete human creations—artifacts—that reflect values, beliefs, and behaviors
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Key term: culture region—an area marked by culture that distinguishes it from another region.
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Key term: culture trait—a single attribute of a culture
Traits of greeting in different cultures
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Culture traits make up a culture complex
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Similar culture complexes make up a culture system, which often corresponds with a geographic region.
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Culture hearths
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Key term: Cultural diffusion
Many things diffuse—the movement of people, goods, and ideas—while some are the result of independent invention. Diffusion of the chariot (b.c.e.) Carl Sauer and Torsten Hagerstrand
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Kinds of expansion diffusion
1. contagious—almost all individuals and areas outward from the source region are affected (rate is affected by time-distance decay)
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2. hierarchical diffusion--
First spread to larger areas or more prominent people, then to smaller and less prominent.
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3. stimulus diffusion—a basic idea, not the thing itself, stimulates imitative behavior within a population Sequoya invented an alphabet for the Cherokee language after seeing the English alphabet.
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Relocation diffusion—individuals or populations migrating from the source physically carry the innovation or idea to the new location. Christian missionaries carry their religion to new lands
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In migrant diffusion, the spread of a cultural trait is slow enough that the trait weakens in the source area by the time it reaches the new area.
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Key terms Acculturation—the less dominant culture adopts traits of the more dominant Assimilation—when people lose their native customs (including language and religion), as when the dominant culture completely absorbs the less dominant. Transculturation—a two-way flow of culture reflects a more equal exchange of culture traits
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Cultural differences Syncretism explains how and why cultures change through the process of fusion of the old and the new. Syncretizing the Gospel
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LANGUAGE A systematic means of communicating ideas and feelings through the use of signs, gestures, marks, or vocal sounds. Language ensures the transmission of culture from one generation to the next.
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Location of languages Chinese, Spanish, English, Hindi, Arabic, Portuguese, Bengali, Russian, Japanese, German are the 10 most common first languages.
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Language families have a shared, but fairly distant, origin.
Half the world’s population speaks an Indo-European language. Romance languages (Spanish) and Germanic languages (English) are subfamilies.
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Language is culturally defined, and standard language is that that is recognized by the government and the intellectual elite as the norm for use in schools, government, the media, and other aspects of public life. The standard language may be designated the official language of a country.
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Dialects are regional variations of a standard language.
Isoglosses are the lines that mark dialect regions.
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More key terms Bilingualism Multilingualism Lingua franca Toponymy—the study of place names Language extinction
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RELIGION Religion varies in its cultural influence. Traditionally, almost all cultures have centered on religion. However, there are some ideologies that have replaced religion as a key cultural component: humanism—humans guide their own lives Marxism—transformed communism into a central ideology
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Religion emphasizes the sacred and the divine.
profane: ordinary sacred: extraordinary, inspiring awe and reverence Religion interests geographers because it shapes the cultural landscape.
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Subgroups of universalizing religions:
Universalizing religions attempt to be global, to appeal to all people wherever they may live. Subgroups of universalizing religions: a. Branches are large and basic divisions within religions b. Denominations are divisions or branches that unite local groups into a single administrative body. c. Sects are relatively small groups that do not affiliate with the more mainstream denominations.
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Christianity, the oldest and largest of the universalizing religions.
Three main branches Roman Catholic—50% Protestant—25% Eastern Orthodox—10%
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Islam, the newest and the second largest of the universalizing religions.
Two main branches Sunni—83% Shiite (Shi’a)—16% (Iran, Pakistan, Iraq)
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Buddhism, the smallest of the unversalizing.
Three main branches Mahayana—56% Theraveda—18% (Southeast Asia) Tantrayana—6% (Tibet & Mongolia)
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Sikhism and Baha’i are also universalizing.
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Ethnic religions—do not seek converts and are usually spatially concentrated
Hinduism—world’s third largest religion
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Chinese religions— Confucianism and Daoism
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Shintoism—native ethnic religion of Japan
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Judaism
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Traditional Religions
Shamanism Animism
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Cultural landscape of religion
disposing of the dead
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Folk Culture is traditionally practiced by small, homogeneous groups living in isolated rural areas.
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Popular culture is usually urban-based, with a general mass of people conforming to and then abandoning ever-changing cultural trends. Folk cultures don’t go away, but they blend so well with the popular culture that the difference between local and universal lose meaning.
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Environmental Impact of Popular Culture
1. Uniform landscape
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2. Increased demand for natural resources
To produce one pound of beef, the animal needs to consume TEN pounds of grain. Pelts for clothing
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The End
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