Book No.002 (Sociology)

Book Name Sociology (C.N. Shankar Rao)

What’s Inside the Chapter? (After Subscription)

1. MEANING OF CULTURE

2. CHARACTERISTICS OF CULTURE

3. CULTURE CONTENTS

4. FUNCTIONS OF CULTURE

5. SUB-CULTURE

6. DEVELOPMENT OF CULTURE

7. CULTURE GROWTH

7.1. Cultural Diffusion

7.2. Invention

7.3. Discovery

8. ELEMENTS OF CULTURE

8.1. Cognitive Elements

8.2. Beliefs

8.3. Values and Norms

8.4. Signs

9. CULTURAL SYSTEMS AND SUB-SYSTEMS

10. CULTURAL CHANGE

10.1. Causes of Cultural Change (According to Dressler and Carns)

11. CIVILIZATION

12. DISTINCTION BETWEEN CULTURE AND CIVILISATION

13. INTERDEPENDENCE OF AND INTERRELATIONSHIP BETWEEN CULTURE AND CIVILISATION

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LANGUAGE

Culture

Sociology  – C.N. Shankar Rao

Chapter – 15

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Harshit Sharma

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Table of Contents

MEANING OF CULTURE

  • Culture is a crucial concept in social science, used in Psychology, Political Science, Economics, Anthropology, and Sociology.
  • The study of society is incomplete without understanding its culture. Culture and society are inseparable and go together.
  • Culture is unique to man and distinguishes human society from sub-human life.
  • Unlike animals, humans are born and raised in a cultural environment. The saying “Man is a social being” can be redefined as “Man is a cultural being.”
  • Every person is a representative of their culture, which separates humans from lower animals.
  • Culture encompasses all aspects of life: behavior, philosophies, ethics, morals, manners, customs, traditions, religious, political, and economic activities.
  • Culture includes everything that humans acquire through individual and social life. MacIver and Page define culture as “the realm of styles, values, emotional attachments, and intellectual adventures.”
  • Culture is the entire social heritage that an individual inherits from the group.
  • The term culture is often misunderstood or misused in non-sociological contexts.
  • Culture is sometimes wrongly equated with education, where an educated person is termed “cultured,” and uneducated individuals are labeled “uncultured.”
  • In sociology, culture does not mean personal refinement or education.
  • Historians often define culture in terms of “higher achievements” like art, music, literature, philosophy, religion, and science, which sociologists do not.
  • Sociologists view culture as encompassing all achievements of group life, not just the “higher” achievements.
  • Culture and nationality are not always synonymous; people within the same nationality may have diverse cultural traits.
  • B. Malinowski defines culture as the “cumulative creation of man” and the medium through which man achieves his ends.
  • Graham Wallas sees culture as an accumulation of thoughts, values, and objects passed down through learning from preceding generations, contrasting it with biological heritage.
  • C.C. North defines culture as “instruments created by man to assist in satisfying his wants.”
  • Robert Bierstedt describes culture as the complex whole that consists of all the ways we think, do, and have as members of society.
  • E.V. de Roberty regards culture as the body of thoughts and knowledge, both theoretical and practical, unique to man.
  • Edward B. Tylor, a famous anthropologist, defines culture as “that complex whole which includes knowledge, belief, art, morals, law, custom, and other capabilities and habits acquired by man as a member of society.” Tylor’s definition is widely quoted today.

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