Intercultural Communication
Activity on CULTURE
1. After you read the complete handout, write a six or seven-line definition of “culture” based on the ideas presented.
2. Write another definition of “culture,” this time, a brief three-line definition, from your personal point of view and in your own words. (Please make sure you add it to the blog by writing it on the "comments" section and include your and your partner's name)
3. From the quotes on “culture” at the end of the handout, pick the two that you like the most and explain them in your own words.
4. Write your own quote on culture. (Please make sure you add it to the blog by writing it on the "comments" section and include your and your partner's name)
Discuss the following questions with your partner. If you have an interesting insight that you would like to share with the class, include it on the "comments" section.
-Why do you think a university course on culture is necessary?
-Think of examples in which culture has concrete consequences in real people’s lives.
-Think of two examples of world events that are directly or indirectly related to the issue of culture and (failed or successful) intercultural communication.
-How can understanding different cultures better and practicing efficient intercultural communication affect global problems such as war, terrorism, illegal hunting of endangered species, child prostitution, aids, unsafe abortions, etc.?
READING
Taken from: http://www.wsu.edu:8001/vcwsu/commons/topics/culture/culture-definition.html
A Baseline Definition of Culture
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People learn culture. That, we suggest, is culture's essential feature. Many qualities of human life are transmitted genetically -- an infant's desire for food, for example, is triggered by physiological characteristics determined within the human genetic code. An adult's specific desire for milk and cereal in the morning, on the other hand, cannot be explained genetically; rather, it is a learned (cultural) response to morning hunger. Culture, as a body of learned behaviors common to a given human society, acts rather like a template (i.e. it has predictable form and content), shaping behavior and consciousness within a human society from generation to generation. So culture resides in all learned behavior and in some shaping template or consciousness prior to behavior as well (that is, a "cultural template" can be in place prior to the birth of an individual person).
This primary concept of a shaping template and body of learned behaviors might be further broken down into the following categories, each of which is an important element of cultural systems:
• systems of meaning, of which language is primary
• ways of organizing society, from kinship groups to states and multi-national corporations
• the distinctive techniques of a group and their characteristic products
Several important principles follow from this definition of culture:
• If the process of learning is an essential characteristic of culture, then teaching also is a crucial characteristic. The way culture is taught and reproduced (see reproduction in the glossary) is itself an important component of culture.
• Because the relationship between what is taught and what is learned is not absolute (some of what is taught is lost, while new discoveries are constantly being made), culture exists in a constant state of change.
• Meaning systems consist of negotiated agreements -- members of a human society must agree to relationships between a word, behavior, or other symbol and its corresponding significance or meaning. To the extent that culture consists of systems of meaning, it also consists of negotiated agreements and processes of negotiation.
• Because meaning systems involve relationships which are not essential and universal (the word "door" has no essential connection to the physical object -- we simply agree that it shall have that meaning when we speak or write in English), different human societies will inevitably agree upon different relationships and meanings; this a relativistic way of describing culture.
A recent etymology of the word "culture":
Look in an old dictionary -- say, a pre-1960 Webster's -- and you'll likely find a definition of culture that looks something like this: "1. The cultivation of soil. 2. The raising, improvement, or development of some plant, animal or product" (Friend and Guralnik 1958). This use of the word has its roots in the ancient Latin word cultura, "cultivation" or "tending," and its entrance into the English language had begun by the year 1430 (Oxford English Dictionary). By the time the Webster's definition above was written, another definition had begun to take precedence over the old Latin denotation; culture was coming to mean "the training, development, and refinement of mind, tastes, and manners" (Oxford English Dictionary). The OED traces this definition, which today we associate with the phrase " high culture," back as far as 1805; by the middle of the 20th century, it was fast becoming the word's primary definition.
However, if you try a more modern source, like the American Heritage English Dictionary, you'll find a primary definition of culture which is substantially different than either of the two given above: "The totality of socially transmitted behavior patterns, arts, beliefs, institutions, and all other products of human work and thought." Why such a difference, and in such a (relatively) short period of time? Well, in the past 40 years, the use of the word "culture" has been heavily influenced by the academic fields of sociology and cultural anthropology. These fields have gradually brought what was once a minor definition of culture (the last of eight definitions given in the old 1958 Webster's quoted above) into the mainstream.
It is easy to imagine how the U.S. society which was so focused on "socially transmitted behavior patterns" in the sixties would come to need a word to describe the object of its interest. The civil rights movement during this era brought everyone's attention to bear on cultural differences within U.S. society, while the Vietnam War served to emphasize the position of the U.S. culture in relation to other world cultures.
Over time, these new uses for the word culture have eclipsed its older meanings, those associated with cultivation of the land and the production of crops. You might say that an aspect of U.S. culture over the past 40 years is its fascination with the issue of culture itself -- a fascination which has brought about many changes in the way we speak and the meanings of words which we commonly use.
Famous Quotes about Culture
Culture is properly described as the love of perfection; it is a study of perfection.
Matthew Arnold, Culture and Anarchy, I, 1869 [source: Esar]
Culture looks beyond machinery, culture hates hatred; culture has one great passion, -- the passion for sweetness and light.
Matthew Arnold, Literature and Dogma, pref., 1873 [source: Esar]
Culture is to "know the best that has been said and thought in the world."
Matthew Arnold, Literature and Dogma, pref., 1873 [source: Esar]
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That is true culture which helps us to work for the social betterment of all.
Henry Ward Beecher [source: Correct Quotes]
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A man should be just cultured enough to be able to look with suspicion upon culture.
Samuel Butler [source: Esar]
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Culture is everything. Culture is the way we dress, the way we carry our heads, the way we walk, the way we tie our ties -- it is not only the fact of writing books or building houses.
Aime Cesair, Martiniquen writer, speaking to the World Congress of Black Writers and Artists in Paris [source: Petras and Petras]
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Culture, with us, ends in headache.
Ralph Waldo Emerson, Experience, 1841 [source: Esar]
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No culture can live, if it attempts to be exclusive.
Mahatma Gandhi [source: Correct Quotes]
Culture of the mind must be subservient to the heart.
Mahatma Gandhi [source: Correct Quotes]
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Men are so inclined to content themselves with what is commonest; the spirit and the senses so easily grow dead to the impressions of the beautiful and perfect, that every one should study, by all methods, to nourish in his mind the faculty of feeling these things. ...For this reason, one ought every day at least, to hear a little song, read a good poem, see a fine picture, and, if it were possible, to speak a few reasonable words.
Goethe, Wilhelm Meister's Apprenticeship. Bk. v, ch. 1 (Carlyle, tr.) [source: Stevenson]
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Rather than by your culture spoiled,
Desist, and give us nature wild.
Matthew Green, The Spleen, l. 248 [source: Stevenson]
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Culture is like the sum of special knowledge that accumulates in any large united family and is the common property of all its members. When we of the great Culture Family meet, we exchange reminiscences about Grandfather Homer, and that awful old Dr. Johnson, and Aunt Sappho, and poor Johnny Keats.
Aldous Huxley [source: Flesch]
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Culture is but the fine flowering of real education, and it is the training of the feeling the tastes and the manners that makes it so.
Minnie Kellogg, Iroquois leader [source: Petras and Petras]
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The poor have no business with culture and should beware of it. They cannot eat it; they cannot sell it; they can only pass it on to others and that is why the world is full of hungry people ready to teach us anything under the sun.
Aubrey Menen [source: Flesch]
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A cultivated mind is one to which the fountains of knowledge have been opened, and which has been taught, in any tolerable degree, to exercise its faculties.
John Stuart Mill, Utilitarianism, II, 1863. [source: Esar]
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Culture is what your butcher would have if he were a surgeon.
Mary Pettibone Poole, A Glass Eye at a Keyhole (1938). [source: Maggio]
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The primary indication, to my thinking, of a well-ordered mind is a man's ability to remain in one place and linger in his own company.
Seneca, Epistulae ad Lucilium. Epis. ii, sec. 1. [source: Stevenson]
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Culture is the habit of being pleased with the best and knowing why.
Henry van Dyke [source: Stevenson]
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Culture is an instrument wielded by professors to manufacture professors, who when their turn comes will manufacture professors.
Simone Weil, The Need for Roots (1949) [source: Maggio]
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Are not the processes of culture rapidly creating a class of supercilious infidels, who believe in nothing? Shall a man lose himself in countless masses of adjustments, and be so shaped with reference to this, that, and the other, that the simply good and healthy and brave parts of him are reduced and clipp'd away, like the bordering of a box in a garden?
Walt Whitman, Democratic Vistas, 1870 [source: Esar]
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Culture is what tells you where you come from and who you are based on the transmitted behavior patterns that you ancestors have inherited to society. However, culture has also evolved some patterns like arts, beliefs, religion, sports, education and idioms. Thus, culture is related to the current affairs and conflicts.
ResponderEliminarCulture is the combination of several common characteristics within a group of people. In addition, culture is taught through generations and it is vital in the organization of societies.
ResponderEliminarHerick González.
Carlos Mora.
Culture is based on human behavior of the moment. It is our past , present and future. It resembles pride or hate of its own citizens.
ResponderEliminarCulture is the ever-changing art of humans' interactions throught time and space. Because there is no culture to be called as the one, we are unable to define it: you create one definition everyday, or you create one and discard it the following day.
ResponderEliminarMichael & Catalina
Culture, with us, ends in headache.
ResponderEliminarRalph Waldo Emerson, Experience, 1841 [source: Esar]
Trying to find a definition to Culture is as difficult as tyring to explain where we come from.
No culture can live, if it attempts to be exclusive.
Mahatma Gandhi [source: Correct Quotes]
We have to be open-minded to other cultures and share our culture to others.
Josue Campos
Alejandro Marin
1. Culture is not a biologically inherited, but it is a trait learned from the social environment, in which a person acquires a system of meaning, and social conventions that direct his or her responses to stimuli determined by their surroundings. It is thus a behavioral template that effectively conditions the person's responses to everyday situations.
ResponderEliminar2. Culture does not just include a person's actions or responses to stimulis, but it warps a person's worldview.
3. Culture is but the fine flowering of real education, and it is the training of the feeling the tastes and the manners that makes it so.
Minnie Kellogg, Iroquois leader [source: Petras and Petras]
No culture can live, if it attempts to be exclusive. Mahatma Gandhi [source: Correct Quotes]
4. Culture can be even the way we describe or perceive a flower.
Yulieth and Allan
1. According to the article, culture is a process and a concept which is learned, shaped, and reproduced by a community of people. It is neither universal, nor static based on the idea of constant negotiation of accepted ideals and norms.
ResponderEliminar2. Culture is a forever evolving and an intrinsic part of a people that tells their story and transmits their ideals, values, morals, and identities. Therefore an individual person can identify with many different cultures.
Cristina Aviles and Marykate Jones
3. Culture is everything. Culture is the way we dress, the way we carry our heads, the way we walk, the way we tie our ties -- it is not only the fact of writing books or building houses.
This is the best reflection of our idea of culture, because it is part of who we are and how we act, and interact with others. It is an experience, more so than a literary refrence.
A cultivated mind is one to which the fountains of knowledge have been opened, and which has been taught....
A person who is cultured and who embraces new cultures is one that has an open mind and enlightened view.
"Trying to find a definition to Culture is as difficult as tyring to explain where we come from".
ResponderEliminarJosue Campos
Alejandro Marin
"To criticize culture you must be aware of its existence".
ResponderEliminarHerick Gonzalez.
"Once we fully understand each other we will get to perfection".
Carlos Mora
"A man should be just cultured enough to be able to look with suspicion upon culture": This quote compares two visions of culture: one of the "cultured" human beings meaning they are educated, and the other the ability the be critic.
ResponderEliminar"Culture, with us, ends in headache": This promps of questions about the objective of defining culture itself. Is it necessary? Most successful cultures have survived without ever questioning the origin or definition of the word.
Michael & Catalina
Culture is what you cannot define, but you like it when someone says that you are "cultured".
ResponderEliminarMichael & Catalina
1. Accoring to the article A Baseline Definition of Culture, culture refers to many qualities of human life that are transmited genetically. All learned behaviors and in some shaping template or conciousness prior to behavior as well.
ResponderEliminar2.In our personal opinion, the word culture is based on the location and the period of time a person lives. It is related to the way you dress, the way you speak, what you like and what you eat.
3.1Ralph Waldo Emerson, Experience, 1841 [source: Esar. Because people have different definitions of culture, it is difficult to know who is right !
3.2Aime Cesair, Martiniquen writer, speaking to the World Congress of Black Writers and Artists in Paris [source: Petras and Petras]
what an excellent definition of culture! that is exactly what makes us different from the rest of the world.
4. Culture refers to people and how different they are form each other .
rebeca y alberto
Culture is the group of beliefs, behaviors, and traditions that are learned by the individuals throughout their lives. It encompasses religion, language, socioeconomic status, likes and dislikes, among others.
ResponderEliminar"Culture is all we are but it does not limit us; it is everything around us that we can potentially discover,learn, and tolerate"
-Any Hidalgo & Gloria Bravo
"Culture is everything. Culture is the way we dress, (...)"
ResponderEliminarAime Cesair, Martiniquen writer.
In our opinion, this quote would be more accurately stated if Cesair had said "culture is found in everything" because certain aspects of life are the same worldwide,yet culture affects them all.
Culture can be defined as the way we dress, behave, act, and talk. Culture represents an essential feature of humans which is a heritage that we receive from our parents and the people who surround us. Culture involves human relationships, lifestyles, and languages; it passes from generation to generation.
ResponderEliminarCulture is a mixture of features that characterizes certain groups of people, and it varies depending on the region.
QUOTATIONS:
"Culture is everything. Culture is the way we dress, the way we carry our heads, the way we walk, the way we tie our ties -- it is not only the fact of writing books or building houses."
Aime Cesair, Martiniquen writer, speaking to the World Congress of Black Writers and Artists in Paris [source: Petras and Petras]
c/Once we have acquired culture, people cannot force it to change. It happens that sometimes some people, who stay or visit another country, start to pretend that they have acquired the other culture.
"No culture can live, if it attempts to be exclusive."
Mahatma Gandhi [source: Correct Quotes]
C/ Any culture cannot diminish other cultures; all cultures are influenced by other cultures. As an example, In Costa Rica we have our "tamal", and in Nicaragua they have the "Nacatamal";although both "tamales" are different, they share certain characteristics.
OUR QUOTATION:
"Culture is a monster of combinations"
Vanessa Martínez, Adriana Morales, Paola Quesada.
culture is the way we evolve as humans inside a society in which we interact in order to satisfy our more inner needs as well as the outer ones..
ResponderEliminarGuisella Filomena
How we eat, dress, and interact with each other is defined by culture...
Rosita Wong
Quote's commentaries
A real culture makes its individuals destroy it for the creation of a better one.
Guisella Filomena
Culture is our identity.
Rosita Wong
"No culture can live, if it attempts to be exclusive." Mahatma Gandhi
ResponderEliminarCultures are interrelational, and their health depends on diversity and acceptance.
Silvia and Kelly
Pedro and Cinthya
ResponderEliminar1) According to the article, culture is a set of behaviors that can be learned or pre-established before birth. This definition is known as cultural template. Cultural templates involve different systems such as meaning, sociality organization, distinctive techniques, and the process of leaning among others. The meaning of culture has evolved in the last century. The definition changed from “to cultivate” to a more complex meaning.
2) Culture is everything we do or we don’t. Culture brings us together and makes us apart of it. It includes, but is not limited to, activities, behaviors, ethnics, beliefs, gender among others.
3) “Culture is what your butcher would have if he were a surgeon”.
Pedro says; a butcher works with meat, animal blood, and discarded pieces of meat. If the butcher was a surgeon, he/she will be working around a person’s vital organs. The analogy establishes that culture is what a butcher will have in his hands, if he was a surgeon; that is one’s heart, one’s culture.
Cinthya says: In this quote, the author implies the words “culture” and “education” are related or have a similar meaning. He suggests that an educated doctor would be a surgeon. I disagree with that. Culture and education do not mean the same.
Quote: “Culture is what makes us blush, laugh at others and feel ashamed of ourselves.”
Pedro Acevedo and Cinthya Cervantes
Culture is an everchanging context, a vessel that holds the spices that flavor who we are.
ResponderEliminarMy brief definition of culture:
ResponderEliminarCulture is a common classification system that permits members of a society to assign meaning to different things in the world. These meanings must be continually learned, taught, and negotiated by members of that community. Culture is not stable but rather in a constant state of change, which allows people to classify, makes sense of, and adapt to an ever-evolving world.
My quote on culture:
Culture is the tool with which we use to distinguish and separate ourselves from one another, but perhaps can one day be used to unite us.