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Understanding Sociology


Understanding Sociology

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Chapter 3: Culture

Chapter three examines culture. Though the content of culture varies from place to place, all human cultures share basic elements: knowledge, language, symbols, values, norms, and artifacts. Cultural integration refers to the degree to which all the parts of a culture fit and work together. The opposite of cultural integration is cultural diversity, found where minority groups resist assimilation into the dominant culture in order to maintain their separate identities. Two very different responses to cultural diversity are ethnocentrism—the tendency to view one's own cultural patterns as superior to those of others—and cultural relativism, which stresses that any element of culture is meaningful in relation to a particular time, place, and set of circumstances.

Culture is shaped by many factors and is a dynamic element in society. Cultural gatekeepers, the media, and public tastes can all influence the elements of culture. One of the most significant consequences of the growth of the mass media has been the internationalization of culture. The emergence of a single global culture, fostered more than ever today by the World Wide Web, is a trend that is likely to continue in the twenty-first century.


Glencoe McGraw-Hill