Difference between revisions of "What is culture?"
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<p style="margin-bottom:30px;line-height:30px;font-size:25px;">What is culture? <font size="-1"></font></p> | <p style="margin-bottom:30px;line-height:30px;font-size:25px;">What is culture? <font size="-1"></font></p> | ||
− | If you look up the term culture in the [http://www.oed.com/view/Entry/45746?rskey=zxp4WY&result=1&isAdvanced=false#eid Oxford English Dictionary] you will find that the term | + | If you look up the term "culture" in the [http://www.oed.com/view/Entry/45746?rskey=zxp4WY&result=1&isAdvanced=false#eid Oxford English Dictionary] you will find that the term "culture" is used in very different contexts, can refer to very diverse concepts and there concepts include very different materials. To name just a few of these contexts which the OED establishes: |
*The cultivation of land / soil, plants and animals and the product of such culture, i.e. crop | *The cultivation of land / soil, plants and animals and the product of such culture, i.e. crop | ||
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*Things that refine the mind | *Things that refine the mind | ||
− | It appears so, that even though many people speak about | + | It appears so, that even though many people speak about ''culture'' it is hard to find a single underlying meaning that unifies the description of "culturing" bacteria or "Hawai'i's unique culture and history" (Aloha Feb. 64/3) or observations that "Football is an art more central to our [English] culture than anything the Arts Council deigns to recognize." (Germaine Greer, ''The Independent'', 28 Jun. 1996). |
− | Much rather the term often seems to denote something entirely else depending on the context of utterance. For scholars of culture such as you this poses the question of what you mean when you use the term | + | Much rather the term often seems to denote something entirely else depending on the context of utterance. For scholars of ''culture'' such as you this poses the question of what you mean when you use the term "culture" and what you are looking for if you want to analyse ''culture''? |
You have two options here: | You have two options here: | ||
− | *You can go and try to find the underlying essential core of meaning that unifies all utterances of | + | *You can go and try to find the underlying essential core of meaning that unifies all utterances of "culture" and you can then try to define what ''culture'' is. |
− | *Or you can understand the speaking about culture as a work in progress. You can look at this progress as a constant, ongoing negotiation about what culture is. In these negotiations each speaker constructs the meaning of culture specifically and every time anew. Such a perspective allows you to understand and describe the different contexts of use and position yourself in this [http://wiki.angl-am.uni-oldenburg.de/index.php/The_Discourse_on_Culture discourse on culture]. | + | *Or you can understand the speaking about ''culture'' as a work in progress. You can look at this progress as a constant, ongoing negotiation about what ''culture'' is. In these negotiations each speaker constructs the meaning of "culture" specifically and every time anew. Such a perspective allows you to understand and describe the different contexts of use and position yourself in this [http://wiki.angl-am.uni-oldenburg.de/index.php/The_Discourse_on_Culture discourse on ''culture'']. |
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Revision as of 17:41, 8 June 2012
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What is culture? If you look up the term "culture" in the Oxford English Dictionary you will find that the term "culture" is used in very different contexts, can refer to very diverse concepts and there concepts include very different materials. To name just a few of these contexts which the OED establishes:
It appears so, that even though many people speak about culture it is hard to find a single underlying meaning that unifies the description of "culturing" bacteria or "Hawai'i's unique culture and history" (Aloha Feb. 64/3) or observations that "Football is an art more central to our [English] culture than anything the Arts Council deigns to recognize." (Germaine Greer, The Independent, 28 Jun. 1996). Much rather the term often seems to denote something entirely else depending on the context of utterance. For scholars of culture such as you this poses the question of what you mean when you use the term "culture" and what you are looking for if you want to analyse culture? You have two options here:
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