01-11-2016, 11:42 AM
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What is culture?
Sir Edward Tylor’s definition in 1871 (first use of this term):“that complex whole which includes knowledge, belief, art, morals, law, custom, and any other capabilities and habits acquired by man as a member of society”
Kroeber and Kluckhohn (1952) Culture consists of patterns, explicit and implicit, of and for behavior acquired and transmitted by symbols, constituting the distinctive achievement of human groups, including their embodiment in artifacts; the essential core of culture consists of traditional (i.e. historically derived and selected) ideas and especially their attached values; culture systems may, on the one hand, be considered as products of action, on the other as conditioning elements of further action.
John Bodley (1994): Diverse Definitions
Sapir-Whorf Hypothesis
Sapir (1921): “Human beings do not live in the objective world alone, nor alone in the world of social activity as ordinarily understood, but are very much at the mercy of the particular language which has become the medium of expression in that society.”
As a result of differences in language, people in different cultures will think about, perceive, and behave toward the world differently.
Reality itself is already embedded in language and therefore comes preformed.
Language determines, enabling and constraining, what is perceived and attended to in a culture, as well as the upper limits of knowledge.
Cross-cultural Values
Freedom
Independence
Self-reliance
Equality
Individualism
Competition
Efficiency
Time
Directness
Openness
Belonging
Group harmony
Collectiveness
Age/seniority
Group consciousness
Cooperation
Quality
Patience
Indirectness
Go-between
Edward T. Hall's Model
High-context cultures
Long-lasting relationships
Exploiting context
Spoken agreements
Insiders and outsiders clearly distinguished
Cultural patterns ingrained, slow change
Low-context cultures
Shorter relationships
Less dependent on context
Written agreements
Insiders and outsiders less clearly distinguished
Cultural patterns change faster
Cultural Classification--Hall
Low-Context Cultures - What Is Said Is More Important Than How or Where It Is Said
U.S.
Germany
High-Context cultures - What Is Said and How or Where It is Said Are Significant
Asia
Latin America
Middle East
Low-context in business
Business before friendship
Credibility through expertise & performance
Agreements by legal contract
Negotiations efficient
High-context in business
No business without friendship
Credibility through relationships
Agreements founded on trust
Negotiations slow & ritualistic
High and Low Context Cultures
Basil Bernstein (1971)
Bernstein was interested in social class and the ways in which the class system creates different types of language and is maintained by language.
Relationships in a social group affect the type of speech used by the group. The structure of speech makes different things relevant or significant.
Language codes
Elaborated codes provide a wide range of different ways to say something. These allow speakers to make their ideas and intentions explicit.
Restricted codes have a narrow range of options, and it is easier to predict what form they will take.
Codes and Social Class
Bernstein says members of the middle class use both types of code systems, whereas members of the working class are less likely to use elaborated codes.
Frederick Williams: Poverty Cycle
In dealing with the language of the poverty child, are we dealing with language which is deficient or with language that is different?
As the war on poverty has continued in the U.S., it has become highly evident that the boundaries of poverty are often subcultural ones.
Individuals in a poverty group can be identified by their common socioeconomic problems, and these in turn are typically associated with an equally common range of sociocultural features - ways of life, education, attitudes, desires, and above all, language and the ways of using it.
Much of the attention given to sociocultural aspects of poverty can be seen in the kinds of cause and cures for poverty which are often linked as part of an overall poverty cycle.
Everett Rogers (1962): Diffusion of Innovations
Rogers began developing a practical theory to increase the rate of diffusion and acceptance of agricultural innovations in underdeveloped countries.
Diffusion of Innovations was first published in 1962.
Rogers’ theory is now widely accepted and used in many contexts—business, government, technology, family planning, medicine, etc.
Diffusion in “Real World”
Innovations
Diffusion is the process by which an innovation is communicated through certain channels over time among the members of a social system.
This definition establishes that diffusion consists of four main elements: (1) the innovation (2) the communication channels (3) time and (4) the social system.
The stages through which a technological innovation passes are:
knowledge (exposure to its existence, and understanding of its functions);
persuasion (the forming of a favourable attitude to it);
decision (commitment to its adoption);
implementation (putting it to use); and
confirmation (reinforcement based on positive outcomes from it).
Important characteristics of an innovation include:
relative advantage (the degree to which it is perceived to be better than what it supersedes);
compatibility (consistency with existing values, past experiences and needs);
complexity (difficulty of understanding and use);
trialability (the degree to which itcan be experimented with on a limited basis);
observability (the visibility of its results).
Different adopter categories are identified as:
innovators (venturesome) – 1-3%
early adopters (respectable) – 13%
early majority (deliberate) – 34%
late majority (skeptical) – 34%
laggards (traditional) – 16%