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Sociology 12th Edition Chapter 3

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Sociology 12th Edition Chapter 3
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What Is Culture? Development of Culture around the World Cultural Variation Role of Language Norms and Values Global Culture War Culture and the Dominant Ideology Case Study: Culture at Wal-Mart Social Policy and Culture: Bilingualism BOXES Sociology in the Global Community: Life in the Global Village Sociology in the Global Community: Cultural Survival in Brazil Sociology on Campus: A Culture of Cheating?

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At a fairground in Iran, a girl enjoys a Spiderman ride. Shared learned behavior—what we call culture—can move across international borders to become part of foreign societies

Culture

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Poorer families imitate the rich by applying pottery plaques to their shrine walls. While each family has at least one such shrine, the rituals associated with it are not family ceremonies but are private and secret. The rites are normally only discussed with children, and then only during the period when they are being initiated into these mysteries. I was able, however, to establish sufficient rapport with the natives to examine these shrines and to have the rituals described to me. The focal point of the shrine is a box or chest which is built into the wall. In this chest are kept the many charms and magical potions without which no native believes he could live. These preparations are secured from a variety of specialized practitioners. The most powerful of these are the medicine men, whose assistance must be rewarded with substantial gifts. However, the medicine men do not provide the curative potions for their clients, but decide what the ingredients should be and then write them down in an ancient and secret language. This writing is understood only by the medicine men and by the herbalists who, for another gift, provide the required charm. The charm is not disposed of its ceremonial aspects and assoafter it has served its purpose, but The focal point of the shrine is a box or chest which ciated philosophy are unique. is placed in the charm-box of the is built into the wall. In this chest are kept the many The fundamental belief household shrine. As these magical underlying the whole system charms and magical potions without which no native materials are specific for certain ills, appears to be that the human and the real or imagined maladies believes he could live. body is ugly and that its natuof the people are many, the charmral tendency is to debility and box is usually full to overflowing. The disease. Incarcerated in such a body, man’s only hope is to avert magical packets are so numerous that people forget what their purposes these characteristics through the use of the powerful influences were and fear to use them again. While the natives are very vague on this of ritual and ceremony. Every household has one or more shrines point, we can only assume that the idea in retaining all the old magical devoted to this purpose. The more powerful individuals in the socimaterials is that their presence in the charm-box, before which the body ety have several shrines in their houses and, in fact, the opulence rituals are conducted, will in some way protect the worshipper. of a house is often referred to in terms of the number of such ritual centers it possesses. Most houses are of wattle and daub construc(Miner 1956:503–504) Additional information about this excerpt can be found on the tion, but the shrine rooms of the more wealthy are walled with stone. Online Learning Center at www.mhhe.com/schaefer12e.

Nacirema culture is characterized by a highly developed market economy which has evolved in a rich natural habitat. While much of the people’s time is devoted to economic pursuits, a large part of the fruits of these labors and a considerable portion of the day are spent in ritual activity. The focus of this activity is the human body, the appearance and health of which loom as a dominant concern in the ethos of the people. While such a concern is certainly not unusual,

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In this excerpt from his journal article “Body Ritual among the Nacirema,” anthropologist Horace Miner casts his observant eye on the intriguing rituals of an exotic culture. If some aspects of this culture seem familiar to you, however, you are right, for what Miner is describing is actually the culture of the United States (“Nacirema” is “American” spelled backward). The “shrine” Miner writes of is the bathroom; he correctly informs us that in this culture, one measure of wealth is how many bathrooms one’s home has. In their bathroom rituals, he goes on, the Nacirema use charms and magical potions (beauty products and prescription drugs) obtained from specialized practitioners (such as hair stylists), herbalists (pharmacists), and medicine men (physicians). Using our sociological imaginations, we could update Miner’s description of the Nacirema’s charms, written in 1956, by adding tooth whiteners, anti-aging creams, Waterpiks, and hair gel. When we step back and examine a culture thoughtfully and objectively, whether it is our own culture in disguise or another less familiar to us, we learn something new about society. Take

Fiji, an island in the Pacific where a robust, nicely rounded body has always been the ideal for both men and women. This is a society in which “You’ve gained weight” traditionally has been considered a compliment, and “Your legs are skinny,” an insult. Yet a recent study shows that for the first time, eating disorders have been showing up among the young people in Fiji. What has happened to change their body image? Since the introduction of cable television in 1995, many Fiji islanders, especially young women, have begun to emulate not their mothers and aunts, but the small-waisted stars of television programs currently airing there, like Gilmore Girls and Lost. Studying culture in places like Fiji, then, sheds light on our own society (A. Becker 2007; Fiji TV 2009). In this chapter we will study the development of culture around the world, including the cultural effects of the worldwide trend toward globalization. We will see just how basic the study of culture is to sociology. Our discussion will focus both on general cultural practices found in all societies and on the

wide variations that can distinguish one society from another. We will define and explore the major aspects of culture, including language, norms, sanctions, and values. We will see how cultures develop a dominant ideology, and how functionalist and

conflict theorists view culture. We’ll also see what can happen when a major corporation ignores cultural variations. Finally, in the Social Policy section we will look at the conflicts in cultural values that underlie current debates over bilingualism.

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Culture

What Is Culture?

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ulture is the totality of learned, socially transmitted customs, knowledge, material objects, and behavior. It includes the ideas, values, and artifacts (for example, DVDs, comic books, and birth control devices) of groups of people. Patriotic attachment to the flag of the United States is an aspect of culture, as is a national passion for the tango in Argentina. Sometimes people refer to a particular person as “very cultured” or to a city as having “lots of culture.” That use of the term culture is different from our use in this textbook. In sociological terms, culture does not refer solely to the fine arts and refined intellectual taste. It consists of all objects and ideas within a society, including slang words, ice cream cones, and rock music. Sociologists consider both a portrait by Rembrandt and the work of graffiti spray painters to be aspects of culture. A tribe that cultivates soil by hand has just as much culture as a people that relies on computer-operated machinery. Each people has a distinctive culture with its own characteristic ways of gathering and preparing food, constructing homes, structuring the family, and promoting standards of right and wrong. The fact that you share a similar culture with others helps to define the group or society to which you belong. A fairly large number of people are said to constitute a society when they live in the same territory, are relatively independent of people outside

their area, and participate in a common culture. Metropolitan Los Angeles is more populous than at least 150 nations, yet sociologists do not consider it a society in its own right. Rather, they see it as part of—and dependent on—the larger society of the United States. A society is the largest form of human group. It consists of people who share a common heritage and culture. Members of the society learn this culture and transmit it from one generation to the next. They even preserve their distinctive culture through literature, art, video recordings, and other means of expression. Sociologists have long recognized the many ways in which culture influences human behavior. Through what has been termed a tool kit of habits, skills, and styles, people of a common culture construct their acquisition of knowledge, their interactions with kinfolk, their entrance into the job market—in short, the way in which they live. If it were not for the social transmission of culture, each generation would have to reinvent television, not to mention the wheel (Swidler 1986). Having a common culture also simplifies many day-to-day interactions. For example, when you buy an airline ticket, you know you don’t have to bring along hundreds of dollars in cash. You can pay with a credit card. When you are part of a society, you take for granted many small (as well as more important) cultural patterns. You assume that theaters will provide seats for the audience, that physicians will not disclose confidential

Dance, like many other aspects of culture, can be expressed in many different ways. On the left, pop star Christina Aguilera executes the latest moves on tour. On the right, traditional Irish step dancers perform in a street parade.

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Chapter 3

information, and that parents will be careful when crossing the street with young children. All these assumptions reflect basic values, beliefs, and customs of the culture of the United States. Today, when text, sound, and video can be transmitted around the world instantaneously, some aspects of culture transcend national borders. The German philosopher Theodor Adorno and others have spoken of the worldwide culture industry that standardizes the goods and services demanded by consumers. Adorno contends that globally, the primary effect of popular culture is to limit people’s choices. Yet others have shown that the culture industry’s influence does not always permeate international borders. Sometimes the culture industry is embraced; at other times, soundly rejected (Adorno [1971] 1991:98–106; Horkheimer and Adorno [1944] 2002).

The cultural practices Murdock listed may be universal, but the manner in which they are expressed varies from culture to culture. For example, one society may let its members choose their own marriage partners; another may encourage marriages arranged by the parents. Not only does the expression of cultural universals vary from one society to another; within a society, it may also change dramatically over time. Each generation, and each year for that matter, most human cultures change and expand through the processes of innovation and diffusion.

Ethnocentrism
Many everyday statements reflect our attitude that our own culture is best. We use terms such as underdeveloped, backward, and primitive to refer to other societies. What “we” believe is a religion; what “they” believe is superstition and mythology. It is tempting to evaluate the practices of other cultures on the basis of our own perspectives. Sociologist William Graham Sumner (1906) coined the term ethnocentrism to refer to the tendency to assume that one’s own culture and way of life represent the norm or are superior to all others. The ethnocentric person sees his or her own group as the center or defining point of culture and views all other cultures as deviations from what

Cultural Universals
All societies have developed certain common practices and beliefs, known as cultural universals. Many cultural universals are, in fact, adaptations to meet essential human needs, such as the need for food, shelter, and clothing. Anthropologist George Murdock (1945:124) compiled a list of cultural universals, including athletic sports, cooking, funeral ceremonies, medicine, marriage, and sexual restrictions.

FIGURE 3-1

A PALESTINIAN WORLD VIEW

MAPPING LIFE WORLDWIDE

EUROPE

ASIA

ITALY NORTH AMERICA AL SHAM IRAQ

MOROCCO MAURITANIA ALGERIA

TUNISIA

LIBYA

EGYPT

INDIA
ARABIAN QATAR PENINSULA

SUDAN ETHIOPIA SOUTH AMERICA SOMALIA

AUSTRALIA

Source: Fellmann et al. 2007:76.

This map, drawn by a high school student in Gaza, reflects the emphasis on pan-Arabism in the Palestinian educational curriculum. Al Sham refers to “Greater Syria,” a region that encompasses Syria, Jordan, Lebanon, Israel, and the Palestinian territories.

Think about It
What would be the major differences between this map and a map based on your world view? What would account for those differences?

is “normal.” Westerners who think cattle are to be used for food might look down on India’s Hindu religion and culture, which views the cow as sacred. Or people in one culture may dismiss as unthinkable the mate selection or child-rearing practices of another culture. As Figure 3-1 shows, our view of the world is dramatically influenced by the society in which we were raised. Ethnocentric value judgments have complicated U.S. efforts at democratic reform of the Iraqi government. Before the 2003 war in Iraq, U.S. planners had assumed that Iraqis would adapt to a new form of government in the same way the Germans and Japanese did following World War II. But in the Iraqi culture, unlike the German and Japanese cultures, loyalty to the family and the extended clan comes before patriotism and the common good. In a country in which almost half of all people, even those in the cities, marry a first or second cousin, citizens are predisposed to favor their own kin in government and business dealings. Why trust a stranger from outside the family? What Westerners would criticize as nepotism, then, is actually an acceptable, even admirable, practice to Iraqis (J. Tierney 2003). Conflict theorists point out that ethnocentric value judgments serve to devalue groups and to deny equal opportunities. Functionalists, on the other hand, point out that ethnocentrism serves to maintain a sense of solidarity by promoting group pride. Denigrating other nations and cultures can enhance our own patriotic feelings and belief that our way of life is superior. Yet this type of social stability is established at the expense of other peoples. Of course, ethnocentrism is hardly limited to citizens of the United States. Visitors from many African cultures are surprised at the disrespect that children in the United States show their parents. People from India may be repelled by our practice of living in the same household with dogs and cats. Many Islamic fundamentalists in the Arab world and Asia view the United States as corrupt, decadent, and doomed to destruction. All these people may feel comforted by membership in cultures that in their view are superior to ours.

practice in 16 of the 20 countries with the highest child-marriage rates (Figure 3-2 on page 56). From the perspective of cultural relativism, we might ask whether one society should spend its resources to dictate the norms of another. However, federal officials have defended the government’s actions. They contend that child marriage deprives girls of education, threatens their health, and weakens public health efforts to combat HIV/AIDS (Jain and Kurz 2007; B. Slavin 2007).

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Culture

Sociobiology and Culture
While sociology emphasizes diversity and change in the expression of culture, another school of thought, sociobiology, stresses the universal aspects of culture. Sociobiology is the systematic study of how biology affects human social behavior. Sociobiologists assert that many of the cultural traits humans display, such as the almost universal expectation that women will be nurturers and men will be providers, are not learned but are rooted in our genetic makeup. Sociobiology is founded on the naturalist Charles Darwin’s (1859) theory of evolution. In traveling the world, Darwin had noted small variations in species—in the shape of a bird’s beak, for example—from one location to another. He theorized that over hundreds of generations, random variations in genetic makeup had helped certain members of a species to survive in a particular environment. A bird with a differently shaped beak might have been better at gathering seeds than other birds, for instance. In reproducing, these lucky individuals had passed on their advantageous genes to succeeding generations. Eventually, given their advantage in survival, individuals with the variation began to outnumber other members of the species. The species was slowly adapting to its environment. Darwin called this process of adaptation to the environment through random genetic variation natural selection. Sociobiologists apply Darwin’s principle of natural selection to the study of social behavior. They assume that particular forms of behavior become genetically linked to a species if they contribute to its fitness to survive (van den Berghe 1978). In its extreme form, sociobiology suggests that all behavior is the result of genetic or biological factors and that social interactions play no role in shaping people’s conduct. Sociobiologists do not seek to describe individual behavior on the level of “Why is Fred more aggressive than Jim?” Rather, they focus on how human nature is affected by the genetic composition of a group of people who share certain characteristics (such as men or women, or members of isolated tribal bands). In general, sociobiologists have stressed the basic genetic heritage that all humans share and have shown little interest in speculating about alleged differences between racial groups or nationalities. A few researchers have tried to trace specific behaviors, like criminal activity, to certain genetic markers, but those markers are not deterministic. Family cohesiveness, peer group behavior, and other social factors can override genetic influences on behavior (Guo et al. 2008; E. Wilson 1975, 1978). Some researchers insist that intellectual interest in sociobiology will only deflect serious study of the more significant influence on human behavior, the social environment. Yet Lois Wladis Hoffman (1985), in her presidential address to the Society for the Psychological Study of Social Issues, argued that sociobiology poses a valuable challenge to social scientists to better document

Cultural Relativism
While ethnocentrism means evaluating foreign cultures using the familiar culture of the observer as a standard of correct behavior, cultural relativism means viewing people’s behavior from the perspective of their own culture. It places a priority on understanding other cultures, rather than dismissing them as “strange” or “exotic.” Unlike ethnocentrists, cultural relativists employ the kind of value neutrality in scientific study that Max Weber saw as so important. Cultural relativism stresses that different social contexts give rise to different norms and values. Thus, we must examine practices such as polygamy, bullfighting, and monarchy within the particular contexts of the cultures in which they are found. Although cultural relativism does not suggest that we must unquestionably accept every cultural variation, it does require a serious and unbiased effort to evaluate norms, values, and customs in light of their distinctive culture. Consider the practice of children marrying adults. Most people in North America cannot fathom the idea of a 12-year-old girl marrying. The custom, which is illegal in the United States, is common in West Africa and South Asia. Should the United States respect such marriages? The apparent answer is no. In 2006 the U.S. government spent $623 million to discourage the

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Chapter 3

FIGURE 3-2

COUNTRIES WITH HIGH CHILD MARRIAGE RATES

MAPPING LIFE WORLDWIDE

Guatemala El Salvador Nicaragua

Dominican Republic Trinidad & Tobago

Mauritania Senegal

Pakistan Eritrea Chad CAR Ethiopia Uganda Tanzania Malawi Yemen India

Nepal

Mali Niger

Percentage of Women Who Married under Age 18
50–77 percent 40–49.9 percent 30–39.9 percent Under 30 percent

Guinea Burkina Faso Liberia Cote d’Ivoire Togo Benin Nigeria Cameroon Gabon Zambia

Bangladesh

Madagascar Mozambique

Source: Jain and Kurz 2007:46.

In 33 countries, over 30 percent of the women under 18 are married.

their own research. Interactionists, for example, could show how social behavior is not programmed by human biology, but instead adjusts continually to the attitudes and responses of others. Certainly most social scientists would agree that there is a biological basis for social behavior. But there is less support for the extreme positions taken by certain advocates of sociobiology. Like interactionists, conflict theorists and functionalists believe that people’s behavior rather than their genetic structure defines social reality. Conflict theorists fear that the sociobiological approach could be used as an argument against efforts to assist disadvantaged people, such as schoolchildren who are not competing successfully (Guterman 2000; Segerstråle 2000; E. Wilson 2000).

section we will examine two of the social processes that make these remarkable achievements possible: innovation and the diffusion of culture through globalization and technology.

Innovation
The process of introducing a new idea or object to a culture is known as innovation. Innovation interests sociologists because of the social consequences of introducing something new. There are two forms of innovation: discovery and invention. Discovery involves making known or sharing the existence of an aspect of reality. The finding of the DNA molecule and the identification of a new moon of Saturn are both acts of discovery. A significant factor in the process of discovery is the sharing of newfound knowledge with others. In contrast, an invention results when existing cultural items are combined into a form that did not exist before. The bow and arrow, the automobile, and the television are all examples of inventions, as are Protestantism and democracy.

Development of Culture around the World
We’ve come a long way from our prehistoric heritage. The human species has produced such achievements as the novels of Leo Tolstoy, the art of Pablo Picasso, and the films of Ang Lee. As we begin a new millennium, we can transmit an entire book around the world via the Internet, clone cells, and prolong lives through organ transplants. We can peer into the outermost reaches of the universe or analyze our innermost feelings. In this

Globalization, Diffusion, and Technology
The recent emergence of Starbucks, the worldwide chain of coffeehouses, is just one illustration of the rapidly escalating trend toward globalization (see Chapter 1). While people in Asia are beginning to enjoy coffee, people in North America are discovering sushi. Some have become familiar with the bento box, a small

SOCIOLOGY IN THE GLOBAL COMMUNITY
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Life in the Global Village consumer goods in populous countries such as China. Third, these multinational firms have cooperated with global financial institutions, organizations, and governments to promote free trade—unrestricted or lightly restricted commerce across national borders. Globalization is not universally welcomed. Many critics see the dominance of “businesses without borders” as benefiting the rich, particularly the very wealthy in industrial countries, native cultures, if they dominate the media at the expense of local art forms. As Sembene Ousmane, one of Africa’s most prominent writers and filmmakers, noted, “[Today] we are more familiar with European fairy tales than with our own traditional stories” (World Development Forum 1990:4). Globalization has its positive side, too. Many developing nations are taking their place in the world of commerce and bringing in much needed income. The communications revolution helps people to stay connected and gives them access to knowledge that can improve living standards and even save lives. For example, people suffering from illnesses are now accessing treatment programs that were developed outside their own nation’s medical establishment. The key seems to be finding a balance between the old ways and the new—becoming modernized without leaving meaningful cultural traditions behind. LET’S DISCUSS 1. How are you affected by globalization? Which aspects of globalization do you find advantageous and which objectionable? 2. How would you feel if the customs and traditions you grew up with were replaced by the culture or values of another country? How might you try to protect your culture?
Sources: Dodds 2000; Giddens 1991; Hirst and Thompson 1996; D. Martin et al. 2006; Ritzer 2004; Sernau 2001; Tedeschi 2006.

Imagine a “borderless world” in which culture, trade, commerce, money, and even people move freely from one place to another. Popular culture is widely shared, whether it be Japanese sushi or U.S. running shoes, and the English speaker who answers questions over the telephone about your credit card account is as likely to be in India or Ireland as in the United States. In this world, even the sovereignty of nations is at risk, challenged by political movements and ideologies that span nations. There is no need to imagine this world, for we are already living in the age of globalization. African tribal youngsters wear Simpsons T-shirts; Thai teens dance to techno music; American children collect Hello Kitty items. Ethnic accessories have become a fashion statement in the United States, and Asian martial arts have swept the world. What caused this great wave of cultural diffusion? First, sociologists take note of advances in communications technology. Satellite TV, cell phones, the Internet, and the like allow information to flow freely across the world, linking global markets. In 2008, this process reached the point where consumers could view videos on handheld devices and surf the Internet on their wireless cell phones, shopping online at Amazon.com, eBay, and other commercial Web sites from cars, airports, and cafeterias. Second, corporations in the industrial nations have become multinational, with both factories and markets in developing countries. Business leaders welcome the opportunity to sell

Even James Bond movies and Britney Spears may be seen as threats to native cultures. at the expense of the poor in less developed nations. They consider globalization to be a successor to the imperialism and colonialism that oppressed Third World nations for centuries. Another criticism of globalization comes from people who feel overwhelmed by global culture. Embedded in the concept of globalization is the notion of the cultural domination of developing nations by more affluent nations. Simply put, people lose their traditional values and begin to identify with the culture of dominant nations. They may discard or neglect their native languages and dress as they attempt to copy the icons of mass-market entertainment and fashion. Even James Bond movies and Britney Spears may be seen as threats to

lunchbox that is often used to serve sushi. More and more cultural expressions and practices are crossing national borders and having an effect on the traditions and customs of the societies exposed to them. Sociologists use the term diffusion to refer to the process by which a cultural item spreads from group to group or society to society. Diffusion can occur through a variety of means, among them exploration, military conquest, missionary work, and the influence of the mass media, tourism, and the Internet (Box 3-1). Sociologist George Ritzer coined the term McDonaldization of society to describe how the principles of fast-food restaurants developed in the United States have come to dominate more and more sectors of societies throughout the world (see Chapter 5). For example, hair salons and medical clinics now take walk-ins. In Hong Kong, sex selection clinics offer a menu of items, from fertility enhancement to methods of increasing the likelihood of having a child of the desired sex. Religious groups—from evangelical preachers on local stations or Web sites to priests at the Vatican Television Center—use marketing techniques similar to those that are used to sell Happy Meals. McDonaldization is associated with the melding of cultures, through which we see more and more similarities in cultural

expression. In Japan, for example, African entrepreneurs have found a thriving market for hip-hop fashions popularized by teens in the United States. And the familiar Golden Arches of McDonald’s can be seen around the world. Yet corporations like McDonald’s have had to make some adjustments of their own. Until 2001, McDonald’s ran its overseas operations from corporate headquarters in suburban Chicago. After a few false starts, executives recognized the need to develop the restaurant’s menus and marketing strategies overseas, relying on advice from local people. Now, at over 3,700 restaurants in Japan, customers can enjoy the Tamago Burger—beef, bacon, and fried egg with special sauces. In India, patrons who don’t eat beef can order a double chicken-patty sandwich known as the Maharaja Mac. And in Austria, the locals’ love of coffee, cake, and conversation has inspired the McCafe (Hughlett 2008; Ritzer 2002, 2008). Technology in its many forms has increased the speed of cultural diffusion and broadened the distribution of cultural elements. Sociologist Gerhard Lenski has defined technology as “cultural information about how to use the material resources of the environment to satisfy human needs and desires” (Nolan and Lenski 2009:37). Today’s technological developments no longer

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Chapter 3

Cultural Variation
Each culture has a unique character. Inuit tribes in northern Canada, wrapped in furs and dieting on whale blubber, have little in common with farmers in Southeast Asia, who dress for the heat and subsist mainly on the rice they grow in their paddies. Cultures adapt to meet specific sets of circumstances, such as climate, level of technology, population, and geography. Thus, despite the presence of cultural universals such as courtship and religion, great diversity exists among the world’s many cultures. Moreover, even within a single nation, certain segments of the populace develop cultural patterns that differ from the patterns of the dominant society.
Cultural practices may spread through diffusion, but they undergo change in the process. Because this McDonald’s restaurant in Riyadh serves Saudi Arabians, McRibs are out and McArabia—grilled chicken on flatbread—is in. Note the separate lines for men and women.

Subcultures
Rodeo riders, residents of a retirement community, workers on an offshore oil rig—all are examples of what sociologists refer to as subcultures. A subculture is a segment of society that shares a distinctive pattern of mores, folkways, and values that differs from the pattern of the larger society. In a sense, a subculture can be thought of as a culture existing within a larger, dominant culture. The existence of many subcultures is characteristic of complex societies such as the United States. Members of a subculture participate in the dominant culture while at the same time engaging in unique and distinctive forms of behavior. Frequently, a subculture will develop an argot, or specialized language, that distinguishes it from the wider society. Athletes who play parkour, an extreme sport that combines forward running with fence leaping and the vaulting of walls, water barriers, and even moving cars, speak an argot they devised especially to describe their feats. Parkour runners talk about doing

await publication in journals with limited circulation. Press conferences, often carried simultaneously on the Internet, trumpet the new developments. Technology not only accelerates the diffusion of scientific innovations but also transmits culture. The English language and North American culture dominate the Internet and World Wide Web. Such control, or at least dominance, of technology influences the direction of diffusion of culture. For example, Web sites cover even the most superficial aspects of U.S. culture but offer little information about the pressing issues faced by citizens of other nations. People all over the world find it easier to visit electronic chat rooms about the latest reality TV shows than to learn about their own governments’ policies on day care or infant nutrition. Sociologist William F. Ogburn (1922) made a useful distinction between the elements of material and nonmaterial culture. Material culture refers to the physical or technological aspects of our daily lives, including food, houses, factories, and raw materials. Nonmaterial culture refers to ways of using material objects, as well as to customs, beliefs, philosophies, governments, and patterns of communication. Generally, the nonmaterial culture is more resistant to change than the material culture. Consequently, Ogburn introduced the term culture lag to refer to the period of maladjustment when the nonmaterial culture is still struggling to adapt to new material conditions. For example, the ethics of using the Internet, particularly issues concerning privacy and censorship, have not yet caught up with the explosion in Internet use and technology (Griswold 2004). Resistance to technological change can lead not only to culture lag, but to some real questions of cultural survival (Box 3-2).

use your sociological imagination
If you grew up in your parents’ generation—without computers, e-mail, MP3 players, and cell phones—how would your daily life differ from the one you lead today?

When a society’s nonmaterial culture (its values and laws) does not keep pace with rapid changes in its material culture, people experience an awkward period of maladjustment called culture lag. The transition to nuclear power generation that began in the second half of the 20th century brought widespread protests against the new technology, as well as serious accidents that government officials were poorly prepared to deal with. Tensions over the controversial technology have not run as high in some countries as in others, however. France, where this nuclear power plant is situated, generates 78 percent of all its electricity through nuclear power. The technology is not as controversial there as in the United States and Canada, which generate less than 20 percent of their electricity through nuclear reaction.

www.mhhe.com/schaefer12e

SOCIOLOGY IN THE GLOBAL COMMUNITY
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Cultural Survival in Brazil development of indigenous lands, but indigenous peoples tell a different story. In Mato Grosso, a heavily forested state near the Amazon River, loggers have been clear-cutting the land at a rate that alarms the Bororo, an indigenous group that has lived in the area for centuries. According to one elder, the Bororo are now confined to six small reservations of about 500 square miles— much less than the area officially granted them in the 19th century. Grosso. Though Maggi said he would propose a three-year moratorium on development, opponents are skeptical that he will follow through on the promise. Meanwhile, indigenous groups like the Bororo struggle to maintain their culture in the face of dwindling resources. Though the tribe still observes the traditional initiation rites for adolescent boys, members are finding it difficult to continue their hunting and fishing rituals, given the scarcity of game and fish in the area. Pesticides in the runoff from nearby farms have poisoned the water they fish and bathe in, threatening both their health and their culture’s survival. LET’S DISCUSS 1. How do you think the frontier in Brazil today compares to the American West in the 1800s? What similarities do you see? 2. What does society lose when indigenous cultures die?
Sources: Chu 2005; Instituto del Tercer Mundo 2005.

When the first Portuguese ships landed on the coast of what we now know as Brazil, more than 2 million people inhabited the vast, mineral-rich land. They lived in small, isolated settlements, spoke a variety of languages, and embraced many different cultural traditions. Today, over five centuries later, Brazil’s population has grown to more than 180 million, only about 500,000 of whom are indigenous peoples descended from the original inhabitants. Over 200 different indigenous groups have survived, living a life tied closely to the land and the rivers, just as their ancestors did. But over the past two generations, their numbers have dwindled as booms in mining, logging, oil drilling, and agriculture have encroached on their land and their settlements. Many indigenous groups were once nomads, moving around from one hunting or fishing ground to another. Now they are hemmed in on the reservations the government confined them to, surrounded by huge farms or ranches whose owners deny their right to live off the land. State officials may insist that laws restrict the

In Mato Grosso, a heavily forested state near the Amazon River, loggers have been clearcutting the land at a rate that alarms the Bororo.
Indigenous tribes are no match for powerful agribusiness interests, one of whose leaders is also governor of Mato Grosso. Blairo Maggi, head of the largest soybean producer in the world, has publicly trivialized the consequences of the massive deforestation occurring in Mato

King Kong vaults—diving arms first over a wall or grocery cart and landing in a standing position. They may follow this maneuver with a tic tac—kicking off a wall to overcome some kind of obstacle (Wilkinson 2007). Such argot allows insiders—the members of the subculture—to understand words with special meanings. It also establishes patterns of communication that outsiders can’t understand. Sociologists associated with the interactionist perspective emphasize that language and symbols offer a powerful way for a subculture to feel cohesive and maintain its identity. In India, a new subculture has developed among employees at the international call centers established by multinational corporations. To serve customers in the United States and Europe, the young men and women who work there must be fluent speakers of English. But the corporations that employ them demand more than proficiency in a foreign language; they expect their Indian employees to adopt Western values and work habits, including the grueling pace U.S. workers take for granted. In return they offer perks such as Employees of an international call center in Simla, India, socialize after finishing a Western-style dinners, dances, and coveted consumer seven-hour shift on the telephone. Call center employees, who are isolated from other goods. Significantly, they allow employees to take Indians by their adherence to Western holidays and odd working hours, have formed a the day off only on U.S. holidays, like Labor Day and tight-knit subculture based partly on their appreciation for Western-style consumer goods. Thanksgiving—not on Indian holidays like Diwali, the Hindu festival of lights. While most Indian families are home based on hard work and a taste for Western luxury goods and celebrating, call center employees see only each other; when leisure-time pursuits. they have the day off, no one else is free to socialize with them. Increasingly, call center workers are the object of criticism As a result, these employees have formed a tight-knit subculture from Indians who live a more conventional lifestyle centered on

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family and holiday traditions. In response to such negative public opinion, the government of the Indian state where call centers are located has banned schools from teaching English rather than Kannada, the local language. Beginning in 2008, some 300,000 students were affected by the ban (Chu 2007; Kalita 2006). Another shared characteristic among some employees at Indian call centers is their contempt for the callers they serve. In performing their monotonous, repetitive job day after day, hundreds of thousands of these workers have come to see the faceless Americans they deal with as slow, often rude customers. As described in the recent Indian bestseller One Night @ the Call Centre, new trainees quickly learn the “35 10 rule,” meaning that a 35-year-old American’s IQ is the same as a 10-year-old Indian’s. Such shared understandings underpin this emerging subculture (Bhagat 2007; Gentleman 2006). Functionalist and conflict theorists agree that variation exists within a culture. Functionalists view subcultures as variations of particular social environments and as evidence that differences can exist within a common culture. However, conflict theorists suggest that variations often reflect the inequality of social arrangements within a society. A conflict theorist would view the challenges to dominant social norms by African American activists, the feminist movement, and the disability rights movement as reflections of inequity based on race, gender, and disability status. Conflict theorists also argue that subcultures sometimes emerge when the dominant society unsuccessfully tries to suppress a practice, such as the use of illegal drugs.

Cultures change. Fashions we once regarded as unacceptable—such as men wearing earrings and people wearing jeans in the workplace—or associated with fringe groups (such as men and women with tattoos) are now widely accepted. These countercultural practices have been absorbed by mainstream culture.

Culture Shock
Anyone who feels disoriented, uncertain, out of place, or even fearful when immersed in an unfamiliar culture may be experiencing culture shock. For example, a resident of the United States who visits certain areas in China and wants local meat for dinner may be stunned to learn that the specialty is dog meat. Similarly, someone from a strict Islamic culture may be shocked when first seeing the comparatively provocative dress styles and open displays of affection that are common in the United States and various European cultures. All of us, to some extent, take for granted the cultural practices of our society. As a result, it can be surprising and even disturbing to realize that other cultures do not follow our way of life. The fact is that customs that seem strange to us may be considered normal and proper in other cultures, which may see our own mores and folkways as odd.

Countercultures
By the end of the 1960s, an extensive subculture had emerged in the United States, composed of young people turned off by a society they believed was too materialistic and technological. This group included primarily political radicals and hippies who had dropped out of mainstream social institutions. These young men and women rejected the pressure to accumulate more and more cars, larger and larger homes, and an endless array of material goods. Instead, they expressed a desire to live in a culture based on more humanistic values, such as sharing, love, and coexistence with the environment. As a political force, this subculture opposed the United States’ involvement in the war in Vietnam and encouraged draft resistance (Flacks 1971; Roszak 1969). When a subculture conspicuously and deliberately opposes certain aspects of the larger culture, it is known as a counterculture. Countercultures typically thrive among the young, who have the least investment in the existing culture. In most cases, a 20-year-old can adjust to new cultural standards more easily than someone who has spent 60 years following the patterns of the dominant culture (Zellner 1995). In the wake of the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, people around the United States learned of the existence of terrorist groups operating as a counterculture within their country. This was a situation that generations have lived with in Northern Ireland, Israel and the Palestinian territory, and many other parts of the world. But terrorist cells are not necessarily fueled only by outsiders. Frequently people become disenchanted with the policies of their own country, and a few take very violent steps.

use your sociological imagination
You arrive in a developing African country as a Peace Corps volunteer. What aspects of a very different culture do you think would be the hardest to adjust to? What might the citizens of that country find shocking about your culture?

Role of Language
Language is one of the major elements of culture that underlie cultural variations. It is also an important component of cultural capital. Recall from Chapter 1 that Pierre Bourdieu used the term cultural capital to describe noneconomic assets, such as

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family background and past educational investments, which are reflected in a person’s knowledge of language and the arts. Members of a society generally share a common language, which facilitates day-to-day exchanges with others. When you ask a hardware store clerk for a flashlight, you don’t need to draw a picture of the instrument. You share the same cultural term for a small, portable, battery-operated light. However, if you were in England and needed this item, you would have to ask for an electric torch. Of course, even within the same society, a term can have a number of different meanings. In the United States, pot signifies both a container that is used for cooking and an intoxicating drug. In this section we will examine the cultural influence of language, which includes both the written and spoken word and nonverbal communication.

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Language: Written and Spoken
Seven thousand languages are spoken in the world today—many more than the number of countries. Within a nation’s political boundaries, the number of languages spoken may range from only one (as in North Korea) to several hundred (as in Papua New Guinea, with 820). For the speakers of each one, whether they number 2,000 or 200 million, language is fundamental to their shared culture (Gordon 2005). The English language, for example, makes extensive use of words dealing with war. We speak of “conquering” space, “fighting” the “battle” of the budget, “waging war” on drugs, making a “killing” on the stock market, and “bombing” an examination; something monumental or great is “the bomb.” An observer from an entirely different and warless culture could gauge the importance that war and the military have had in our lives simply by recognizing the prominence that militaristic terms have in our language. On the other hand, in the Old West, words such as gelding, stallion, mare, piebald, and sorrel were all used to describe one animal—the horse. Even if we knew little of that period in history, we could conclude from the list of terms that horses were important to the culture. Similarly, the Sami people of northern Norway and Sweden have a rich diversity of terms for snow, ice, and reindeer (Haviland et al. 2008; Magga 2006). Language is, in fact, the foundation of every culture. Language is an abstract system of word meanings and symbols for all aspects of culture. It includes speech, written characters, numerals, symbols, and nonverbal gestures and expressions. Because language is the foundation of every culture, the ability to speak other languages is crucial to intercultural relations. Throughout the Cold War era, beginning in the 1950s and continuing well into the 1970s, the U.S. government encouraged the study of Russian by developing special language schools for diplomats and military advisers who dealt with the Soviet Union. And following September 11, 2001, the nation recognized how few skilled translators it had for Arabic and other languages spoken in Muslim countries. Language quickly became a key, not only to tracking potential terrorists, but to building diplomatic bridges with Muslim countries willing to help in the war against terrorism. Language does more than simply describe reality; it also serves to shape the reality of a culture. For example, most people in the United States cannot easily make the verbal distinctions concerning snow and ice that are possible in the Sami culture. As a result, they are less likely to notice such differences.

A native speaker trains instructors from the Oneida Nation of New York in the Berlitz method of language teaching. Many Native American tribes are taking steps to recover their seldom-used languages, realizing that language is the essential foundation of any culture.

The Sapir-Whorf hypothesis, named for two linguists, describes the role of language in shaping our interpretation of reality. According to Sapir and Whorf, because people can conceptualize the world only through language, language precedes thought. Thus, the word symbols and grammar of a language organize the world for us. The Sapir-Whorf hypothesis also holds that language is not a given. Rather, it is culturally determined and encourages a distinctive interpretation of reality by focusing our attention on certain phenomena (Sapir 1929). For decades, the Navajo have referred to cancer as lood doo na’dziihii. Now, through a project funded by the National Cancer Institute, the tribal college is seeking to change the phrase. Why? Literally, the phrase means “the sore that does not heal,” and health educators are concerned that tribal members who have been diagnosed with cancer view it as a death sentence. Their effort to change the Navajo language, not easy in itself, is complicated by the Navajo belief that to talk about the disease is to bring it on one’s people (Fonseca 2008). Similarly, feminists have noted that gender-related language can reflect—although in itself it does not determine—the traditional acceptance of men and women in certain occupations. Each time we use a term such as mailman, policeman, or fireman, we are implying (especially to young children) that these occupations can be filled only by males. Yet many women work as letter carriers, police officers, and firefighters—a fact that is being increasingly recognized and legitimized through the use of such nonsexist language.

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Language can also transmit stereotypes related to race. Look up the meanings of the adjective black in dictionaries published in the United States. You will find dismal, gloomy or forbidding, destitute of moral light or goodness, atrocious, evil, threatening, clouded with anger. In contrast, dictionaries list pure and innocent among the meanings of the adjective white. Through such patterns of language, our culture reinforces positive associations with the term (and skin color) white and negative associations with black. Is it surprising, then, that a list meant to prevent people from working in a profession is called a blacklist, while a lie that we think of as somewhat Using American Sign Language, a form of nonverbal communication, a football coach discusses a play with his team. The Silent Warriors, four-time national champions and the pride of the Alabama School acceptable is called a white lie? Language can shape how we see, for the Deaf, have defeated both hearing and nonhearing teams. taste, smell, feel, and hear. It also influences the way we think about the people, ideas, and objects are rich in meaning, and may not convey the same meaning in around us. Language communicates a culture’s most important all social contexts. Around someone’s neck, for example, a cross norms, values, and sanctions. That’s why the decline of an old can symbolize religious reverence; over a grave site, a belief in language or the introduction of a new one is such a sensitive everlasting life; or set in flames, racial hatred. issue in many parts of the world (see the Social Policy section at Some symbols or gestures, such as the basic emotional the end of this chapter). expressions—a smile, a look of horror—may be close to universal. Not long ago, a team of linguists, social scientists, and physical scientists collaborated on a system for communicating with Nonverbal Communication those who live thousands of years from now, long after people If you don’t like the way a meeting is going, you might suddenly sit have ceased to speak our languages. The challenge was to creback, fold your arms, and turn down the corners of your mouth. ate a series of signs and explanations that would warn future When you see a friend in tears, you may give a quick hug. After generations of the dangers posed by the Waste Isolation Pilot winning a big game, you probably high-five your teammates. These Plant (WIPP), a nuclear waste repository in New Mexico. For the are all examples of nonverbal communication, the use of gestures, next few centuries, warning signs engraved in English, Spanish, facial expressions, and other visual images to communicate. Russian, French, Chinese, Arabic, and Navajo will alert those in We are not born with these expressions. We learn them, just the area to the presence of the underground dump, which will as we learn other forms of language, from people who share our remain highly radioactive for at least 10,000 years. But the signs same culture. This statement is as true for the basic expressions also include pictographs that researchers hope will be underof happiness and sadness as it is for more complex emotions, standable to people who live millennia from now, no matter such as shame or distress (Fridlund et al. 1987). what their language (Figure 3-3; Department of Energy 2004; Like other forms of language, nonverbal communication is Piller 2006). not the same in all cultures. For example, sociological research done at the micro level documents that people from various cultures differ in the degree to which they touch others during the course of normal social interactions. Even experienced use your sociological imagination travelers are sometimes caught off guard by these differences. In Saudi Arabia, a middle-aged man may want to hold hands Besides your language and gestures, what other with a partner after closing a business deal. In Egypt, men walk aspects of your culture might seem unusual to people hand in hand in the street; in cafés, they fall asleep while loungin India, Japan, or France? ing in each other’s arms. These gestures, which would shock an American businessman, are considered compliments in those cultures. The meaning of hand signals is another form of nonverbal communication that can differ from one culture to the next. In Australia, the thumbs-up sign is considered rude (Passero 2002; Vaughan 2007). “Wash your hands before dinner.” “Thou shalt not kill.” “Respect A related form of communication is the use of symbols to your elders.” All societies have ways of encouraging and enforcconvey meaning to others. Symbols are the gestures, objects, ing what they view as appropriate behavior while discouraging and words that form the basis of human communication. The and punishing what they consider to be improper behavior. thumbs-up gesture, a gold star sticker, and the smiley face in an They also have a collective idea of what is good and desirable in e-mail are all symbols. Often deceptively simple, many symbols

Norms and Values

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FIGURE 3-3

A TIMELESS ALERT

the film is shown. Of course, the application of this norm can vary, depending on the particular film and type of audience. People who are viewing a serious artistic film will be more likely to insist on the norm of silence than those who are watching a slapstick comedy or horror movie. Types of Norms Sociologists distinguish between norms in two ways. First, norms are classified as either formal or informal. Formal norms generally have been written down and specify strict punishments for violators. In the United States, we often formalize norms into laws, which are very precise in defining proper and improper behavior. Sociologist Donald Black (1995) has termed law “governmental social control,” meaning that laws are formal norms enforced by the state. Laws are just one example of formal norms. The requirements for a college major and the rules of a card game are also considered formal norms. In contrast, informal norms are generally understood but not precisely recorded. Standards of proper dress are a common example of informal norms. Our society has no specific punishment or sanction for a person who comes to school, say, wearing a monkey suit. Making fun of the nonconforming student is usually the most likely response. Norms are also classified by their relative importance to society. When classified in this way, they are known as mores and folkways. Mores (pronounced “MOR-ays”) are norms deemed highly necessary to the welfare of a society, often because they embody the most cherished principles of a people. Each society demands obedience to its mores; violation can lead to severe penalties. Thus, the United States has strong mores against murder, treason, and child abuse, which have been institutionalized into formal norms. Folkways are norms governing everyday behavior. Folkways play an important role in shaping the daily behavior of members

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DANGER
POISONOUS RADIOACTIVE WASTE HERE DO NOT DIG OR DRILL

The symbols on this subsurface marker at the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant in New Mexico are an attempt to communicate the presence of hazardous waste to people who may live 10,000 years from now. Would these symbols convince you not to dig? Might future generations misinterpret them?

life—or not. In this section we will learn to distinguish between the closely related concepts of norms and values.

Norms
Norms are the established standards of behavior maintained by a society. For a norm to become significant, it must be widely shared and understood. For example, in movie theaters in the United States, we typically expect that people will be quiet while
In Iraq, a female member of the U.S. Army searches a covered Muslim woman. The searches, which are necessary to prevent terrorist attacks, violate a Muslim norm that forbids touching by strangers.

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When is a kiss more than a kiss? In India, public displays of affection are decidedly not the norm, even among movie stars. When Richard Gere swept actress Shilpa Shethy into his arms at an AIDS awareness event, protests erupted, and some outraged onlookers demanded that he be sanctioned.

of a culture. Society is less likely to formalize folkways than mores, and their violation raises comparatively little concern. For example, walking up a down escalator in a department store challenges our standards of appropriate behavior, but it will not result in a fine or a jail sentence. In many societies around the world, folkways exist to reinforce patterns of male dominance. Various folkways reveal men’s hierarchical position above women within the traditional Buddhist areas of Southeast Asia. In the sleeping cars of trains, women do not sleep in upper berths above men. Hospitals that house men on the first floor do not place women patients on the second floor. Even on clotheslines, folkways dictate male dominance: women’s attire is hung lower than that of men (Bulle 1987).

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use your sociological imagination
You are a high school principal. What norms would you want to govern the students’ behavior? How might those norms differ from those appropriate for college students?

Acceptance of Norms People do not follow norms, whether mores or folkways, in all situations. In some cases, they can evade a norm because they know it is weakly enforced. It is illegal for U.S. teenagers to drink alcoholic beverages, yet drinking by minors is common throughout the nation. (In fact, teenage alcoholism is a serious social problem.) In some instances, behavior that appears to violate society’s norms may actually represent adherence to the norms of a particular group. Teenage drinkers are conforming to the standards of their peer group when they violate norms that condemn underage drinking. Similarly, business executives who use shady accounting techniques may be responding to a corporate culture that demands the maximization of profits at any cost, including the deception of investors and government regulatory agencies. Norms are violated in some instances because one norm conflicts with another. For example, suppose that you live in an apartment building and one night hear the screams of the woman next door, who is being beaten by her husband. If you decide to intervene by ringing their doorbell or calling the police, you are violating the norm of minding your own business, while at the same time following the norm of assisting a victim of violence. Even if norms do not conflict, there are always exceptions to any norm. The same action, under different circumstances, can cause one to be viewed as either a hero or a villain. Secretly taping telephone conversations is normally considered illegal and abhorrent. However, it can be done with a court order to obtain valid evidence for a criminal trial. We would heap praise on a government agent who used such methods to convict an organized crime figure. In our culture, we tolerate killing another human being in self-defense, and we actually reward killing in warfare. Acceptance of norms is subject to change as the political, economic, and social conditions of a culture are transformed. Until the 1960s, for example, formal norms throughout much of the United States prohibited the marriage of people from different racial groups. Over the past half century, however, such legal prohibitions were cast aside. The process of change can be seen today in the increasing acceptance of single parents and growing support for the legalization of marriage between same-sex couples (see Chapter 14). When circumstances require the sudden violation of longstanding cultural norms, the change can upset an entire population. In Iraq, where Muslim custom strictly forbids touching by strangers for men and especially for women, the war that began in 2003 has brought numerous daily violations of the norm. Outside important mosques, government offices, and other facilities likely to be targeted by terrorists, visitors must now be patted down and have their bags searched by Iraqi security guards. To reduce the discomfort caused by the procedure, women are searched by female guards and men by male guards. Despite that concession, and the fact that many Iraqis admit or even insist on the need for such measures, people still wince at the invasion of their personal privacy. In reaction to the searches, Iraqi women have begun to limit the contents of the bags they carry or simply to leave them at home (Rubin 2003).

Sanctions
Suppose a football coach sends a 12th player onto the field. Imagine a college graduate showing up in shorts for a job interview at

TABLE 3-1

NORMS AND SANCTIONS
Sanctions Positive
Salary bonus Testimonial dinner Medal Diploma

Norms
Formal

Negative
Demotion Firing from a job Jail sentence Expulsion Frown Humiliation Bullying

Informal

Smile Compliment Cheers

a large bank. Or consider a driver who neglects to put any money into a parking meter. These people have violated widely shared and understood norms. So what happens? In each of these situations, the person will receive sanctions if his or her behavior is detected. Sanctions are penalties and rewards for conduct concerning a social norm. Note that the concept of reward is included in this definition. Conformity to a norm can lead to positive sanctions such as a pay raise, a medal, a word of gratitude, or a pat on the back. Negative sanctions include fines, threats, imprisonment, and stares of contempt. Table 3-1 summarizes the relationship between norms and sanctions. As you can see, the sanctions that are associated with formal norms (which are written down and codified) tend to be formal as well. If a college coach sends too many players onto the field, the team will be penalized 15 yards. The driver who fails to put money in the parking meter will receive a ticket and have to pay a fine. But sanctions for violations of informal norms can vary. The college graduate who goes to the bank interview in shorts will probably lose any chance of getting the job; on the other hand, he or she might be so brilliant that bank officials will overlook the unconventional attire. The entire fabric of norms and sanctions in a culture reflects that culture’s values and priorities. The most cherished values will be most heavily sanctioned; matters regarded as less critical will carry light and informal sanctions.

Values
Though we each have our own personal set of standards— which may include caring or fitness or success in business—we also share a general set of objectives as members of a society. Cultural values are these collective conceptions of what is considered good, desirable, and proper—or bad, undesirable, and improper—in a culture. They indicate what people in a given culture prefer as well as what they find important and morally right (or wrong). Values may be specific, such as honoring one’s parents and owning a home, or they may be more general, such as health, love, and democracy. Of course, the members of a society do not uniformly share its values. Angry political debates and billboards promoting conflicting causes tell us that much.

Values influence people’s behavior and serve as criteria for evaluating the actions of others. The values, norms, and sanctions of a culture are often directly related. For example, if a culture places a high value on the institution of marriage, it may have norms (and strict sanctions) that prohibit the act of adultery or make divorce difficult. If a culture views private property as a basic value, it will probably have stiff laws against theft and vandalism. The values of a culture may change, but most remain relatively stable during any one person’s lifetime. Socially shared, intensely felt values are a fundamental part of our lives in the United States. Sociologist Robin Williams (1970) has offered a list of basic values. It includes achievement, efficiency, material comfort, nationalism, equality, and the supremacy of science and reason over faith. Obviously, not all 307 million people in this country agree on all these values, but such a list serves as a starting point in defining the national character. Each year more than 240,580 entering college students at 340 of the nation’s four-year colleges fill out a questionnaire about their attitudes. Because this survey focuses on an array of issues, beliefs, and life goals, it is commonly cited as a barometer of the nation’s values. The respondents are asked what values are personally important to them. Over the past 40 years, the value of “being very well-off financially” has shown the strongest gain in popularity; the proportion of first-year college students who endorse this value as “essential” or “very important” rose from 44 percent in 1967 to 76.8 percent in 2008 (Figure 3-4 on Page 66). In contrast, the value that has shown the most striking decline in endorsement by students is “developing a meaningful philosophy of life.” While this value was the most popular in the 1967 survey, endorsed by more than 80 percent of the respondents, it had fallen to sixth place on the list by 2008, when it was endorsed by 51.4 percent of students entering college. During the 1980s and 1990s, support for values having to do with money, power, and status grew. At the same time, support for certain values having to do with social awareness and altruism, such as “helping others,” declined. According to the 2008 nationwide survey, only 44.7 percent of first-year college students stated that “influencing social values” was an “essential” or “very important” goal. The proportion of students for whom “helping to promote racial understanding” was an essential or very important goal reached a record high of 42 percent in 1992, then fell to 37.3 percent in 2008. Like other aspects of culture, such as language and norms, a nation’s values are not necessarily fixed. Whether the slogan is “Plant a Tree” or “Think Green,” students have been exposed to values associated with environmentalism. How many of them accept those values? Poll results over the past 40 years show fluctuations, with a high of nearly 46 percent of students indicating a desire to become involved in cleaning up the environment. Beginning in the 1980s, student support for embracing this objective had dropped to around 20 percent or even lower (see Figure 3-4). Even with recent attention to global warming, the proportion remains level at only 29.5 percent of first-year students in 2008. Recently, cheating has become a hot issue on college campuses. Professors who take advantage of computerized services that can identify plagiarism, such as the search engine Google, have been shocked to learn that many of the papers their students hand in

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summingup

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FIGURE 3-4

LIFE GOALS OF FIRST-YEAR COLLEGE STUDENTS IN THE UNITED STATES, 1966–2008 curity ial se r inanc a popula F ains ering rem t of en ents. goal d e stu g colle

100 Percentage who identify goal as very important or essential 90 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 Develop a meaningful philosophy of life

Help to promote racial understanding

Become involved in cleaning up environment 0 1966 1970 1975 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2008

Be very welloff financially

Sources: UCLA Higher Education Research Institute, as reported in Astin et al. 1994; Pryor et al. 2007, 2008.

Think about It
Why do you think values have shifted among college students in the past few decades? Which of these values is important to you?

foreign opinion of the United States had become quite negative (J. Hunter 1991; Kohut 2005, 2007). In the past 20 years, extensive efforts have been made to compare values in different nations, recognizing the challenges in interpreting value concepts in a similar manner across cultures. Psychologist Shalom Schwartz has measured values in more than 60 countries. Around the world, certain values are widely shared, including benevolence, which is defined as “forgiveness and loyalty.” In contrast, power, defined as “control or dominance over people and resources,” is a value that is endorsed much less often (Hitlin and Piliavin 2004; S. Schwartz and Bardi 2001). Despite this evidence of shared values, some scholars have interpreted the terrorism, genocide, wars, and military occupations of the early 21st century as a “clash of civilizations.” According to this thesis, cultural and religious identities, rather than national or political loyalties, are becoming the prime source of international conflict. Critics of this thesis point out that conflict over values is nothing new; only our ability to create havoc and violence has grown. Furthermore, speaking of a clash of “civilizations” disguises the sharp divisions that exist within large groups. Christianity, for example, runs the gamut from Quaker-style pacifism to certain elements of the Ku Klux Klan’s ideology (Berman 2003; Huntington 1993; Said 2001).

Culture and the Dominant Ideology
Functionalist and conflict theorists agree that culture and society are mutually supportive, but for different reasons. Functionalists maintain that social stability requires a consensus and the support of society’s members; strong central values and common norms provide that support. This view of culture became popular in sociology beginning in the 1950s. It was borrowed from British anthropologists who saw cultural traits as a stabilizing element in a culture. From a functionalist perspective, a cultural trait or practice will persist if it performs functions that society seems to need or contributes to overall social stability and consensus. Conflict theorists agree that a common culture may exist, but they argue that it serves to maintain the privileges of certain groups. Moreover, while protecting their own self-interest, powerful groups may keep others in a subservient position. The term dominant ideology describes the set of cultural beliefs and practices that helps to maintain powerful social, economic, and political interests. This concept was first used by Hungarian Marxist Georg Lukacs (1923) and Italian Marxist Antonio Gramsci (1929), but it did not gain an audience in the United States until the early 1970s. In Karl Marx’s view, a capitalist society has a dominant ideology that serves the interests of the ruling class. From a conflict perspective, the dominant ideology has major social significance. Not only do a society’s most powerful groups and institutions control wealth and property; even more important, they control the means of producing beliefs about reality through religion, education, and the media. Feminists would also argue that if all a society’s most important institutions tell women they should be subservient to men, that dominant

are plagiarized in whole or in part. Box 3-3 examines the shift in values that underlies this decline in academic integrity. Another value that has begun to change recently, not just among students but among the public in general, is the right to privacy. Americans have always valued their privacy and resented government intrusions into their personal lives. In the aftermath of the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, however, many citizens called for greater protection against the threat of terrorism. In response, the U.S. government broadened its surveillance powers and increased its ability to monitor people’s behavior without court approval. In 2001, shortly after the attacks, Congress passed the Patriot Act, which empowers the FBI to access individuals’ medical, library, student, and phone records without informing them or obtaining a search warrant.

Global Culture War
For almost a generation, public attention in the United States has focused on culture war, or the polarization of society over controversial cultural elements. Originally, in the 1990s, the term referred to political debates over heated issues such as abortion, religious expression, gun control, and sexual orientation. Soon, however, it took on a global meaning—especially after 9/11, as Americans wondered, “Why do they hate us?” Through 2000, global studies of public opinion had reported favorable views of the United States in countries as diverse as Morocco and Germany. But by 2003, in the wake of the U.S. invasion of Iraq,

SOCIOLOGY ON CAMPUS
3-3

A Culture of Cheating? students reported having cheated in some way during the past year. In both cultures, students were more willing to cheat if they perceived their peers to be dishonest and if they thought their cheating was unlikely to be reported. To address what they consider an alarming trend, many schools are rewriting or adopting new academic honor codes. This renewed emphasis on honor and integrity underscores the influence of cultural values on social behavior. Observers contend that the increase in student cheating reflects widely publicized instances of cheating in public life, which have served to create an alternative set of values in which the end justifies the means. When young people see sports heroes, authors, entertainers, and corporate executives exposed for cheating in one form or another, the message seems to be “Cheating is OK, as long as you don’t get caught.” More than proctoring of exams or reliance on search engines to identify plagiarism, then, educating students about the need for academic honesty seems to reduce the incidence of cheating. “The feeling of being treated as an adult and responding in kind,” says Professor Donald McCabe of Rutgers University, “it’s clearly there for many students. They don’t want to violate that trust.” LET’S DISCUSS 1. Do you know anyone who has engaged in Internet plagiarism? What about cheating on tests or falsifying laboratory results? If so, how did the person justify these forms of dishonesty? 2. Even if cheaters aren’t caught, what negative effects does their academic dishonesty have on them? What effects does it have on students who are honest? Could an entire college or university suffer from students’ dishonesty?
Sources: Argetsinger and Krim 2002; Bartlett 2009; Center for Academic Integrity 2006; McCabe et al. 2008; R. Thomas 2003; Zernike 2002.

On November 21, 2002, after issuing several warnings, officials at the U.S. Naval Academy seized the computers of almost 100 midshipmen suspected of downloading movies and music illegally from the Internet. Officers at the school may have taken the unusually strong action to avoid liability on the part of the U.S. government, which owns the computers students were using. But across the nation, college administrators have been trying to restrain students from downloading pirated entertainment for free. The practice is so widespread, it has been slowing down the high-powered computer networks colleges and universities depend on for research and admissions. Illegal downloading is just one aspect of the growing problem of copyright violation, both on campus and off. Now that college students can use personal computers to surf the Internet, most do their research online. Apparently, the temptation to cut and paste passages from Web site postings and pass them off as one’s own is irresistible to many. Surveys done by the Center for Academic Integrity show that from 1999 to 2005, the percentage of students who approved of this type of plagiarism rose from me 10 percent to 41 percent. At the same time, tting the percentage who considered cutting and ous pasting from the Internet to be a serious form 3 of cheating fell from 68 percent to 23 percent. agiarism Perhaps the worst form of Internet plagiarism m is the purchase of entire papers from other t writers. Increasingly, the Web sites that sell er essays to students are based in other countries, including India, Ukraine, Nigeria, and the Philippines. A recent cross-cultural study compared cheating by students in Lebanon and the United States. Researchers found a high willingness to cheat among students in both countries: 54 percent of the U.S. students and 80 percent of the Lebanese

More than proctoring of exams or reliance on search engines to identify plagiarism, educating students about the need for academic honesty seems to reduce the incidence of cheating.
The Center for Academic Integrity estimates that at most schools, more than 75 percent of the students engage in some form of cheating. Students not only cut passages from the Internet and paste them into their papers without citing the source; they share questions and answers on exams, collaborate on assignments they are supposed to do independently, and even falsify the results of their laboratory experiments. Worse, many professors have become inured to the problem and have ceased to report it.

ideology will help to control women and keep them in a subordinate position. A growing number of social scientists believe that it is not easy to identify a core culture in the United States. For support, they point to the lack of consensus on national values, the diffusion of cultural traits, the diversity within our culture, and the changing views of young people (look again at Figure 3-4). Yet there is no way of denying that certain expressions of values have greater influence than others, even in as complex a society as the United States. If cultural values vary within the United States, they vary even more significantly from one country to the next. The

following case study illustrates what can happen when a corporation attempts to export U.S. cultural values to another country. Table 3-2 on page 68 summarizes the major sociological perspectives on culture. How one views a culture—whether from an ethnocentric point of view or through the lens of cultural relativism—has important consequences in the area of social policy. It also has serious consequences in business, as our case study on Wal-Mart demonstrates. A hot issue today is the extent to which a nation should accommodate non-native language speakers by sponsoring bilingual programs. We’ll take a close look at this issue in the Social Policy section, on page 69.

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68
Chapter 3

TABLE 3-2

SOCIOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVES ON CULTURE
Functionalist Perspective Conflict Perspective
Reinforce patterns of dominance May perpetuate social inequality Culture reflects a society’s dominant ideology

summingup
Feminist Perspective
Reinforce roles of men and women May perpetuate men’s dominance Culture reflects society’s view of men and women

Interactionist Perspective
Are maintained through face-to-face interaction Are defined and redefined through social interaction A society’s core culture is perpetuated through daily social interactions Customs and traditions are transmitted through intergroup contact and through the media Store–customer relationships in different cultures

Norms

Reinforce societal standards Are collective conceptions of what is good Culture reflects a society’s strong central values

Values

Culture and Society

Cultural Variation

Subcultures serve the interests of subgroups; ethnocentrism reinforces group solidarity Providing goods and services to customers

Countercultures question the dominant social order; ethnocentrism devalues groups Treatment of unions; health benefits; women in management

Cultural relativism respects variations in the way men and women are viewed in different societies Role of women in leadership

Wal-Mart and Culture

casestudy Culture at Wal-Mart
By some measures, Wal-Mart is the largest corporation in the world. By other measures, it is the world’s 14th largest economy. Indeed, the Arkansas-based retailer’s annual revenue—over onethird of a trillion dollars—surpasses the total value of goods and services produced in many countries, such as Sweden. Wal-Mart’s rise to the status of an economic superpower has not been without criticism. Opponents have criticized its policy of shutting out labor unions, its lack of commitment to elevating women to managerial positions, its slowness to provide adequate health care benefits, and its negative impact on smaller retailers in the areas where its stores are located. Nonetheless, U.S. consumers have embraced Wal-Mart’s “everyday low prices.” The reaction has not been as positive when the discount giant has tried to enter countries where consumers hold different cultural values (Barbaro 2008). The company, now located in 15 countries, has not been an unqualified success abroad. In 2006 Wal-Mart pulled out of Germany, due in part to its failure to adjust to the national culture. German shoppers, accustomed to no-nonsense, impersonal service, found Wal-Mart employees’ smiling, outgoing style offputting. The company’s “ten-foot attitude”—a salesperson who comes within 10 feet of a customer must look the person in the eye, greet the person, and ask if he or she needs help—simply did not play well there. Food shoppers, used to bagging their own groceries, were turned off by Wal-Mart’s practice of allowing clerks to handle their purchases. Furthermore, German employees, who had grown up in a culture that accepts workplace romances, found the company’s prohibition against on-the-job relationships bizarre. Unfortunately, executives did not react quickly enough to the cultural clash. Despite their need for cultural know-how, they passed up the opportunity to install German-speaking managers in key positions. While the company struggled to adjust to unfamiliar cultural standards, fierce competition from German retailers cut into its profits. After an eight-year effort that cost the company one billion dollars, Wal-Mart’s executives conceded defeat. Wal-Mart’s withdrawal from Germany was its second exit of the year. Earlier in 2006, the company sold all its facilities in South Korea, where its warehouse-style stores were not appreciated by shoppers accustomed to more elegant surroundings. Today, the successful U.S. retailer is learning not to impose its corporate culture on foreign customers and employees. No longer does the company plan to sell golf clubs in Brazil, where the game is rarely played, or ice skates in Mexico, where skating rinks are hard to find. More important, the corporate giant has begun to study the culture and social patterns of potential customers (Landler and Barbaro 2006; Saporito 2007; Wal-Mart 2007; A. Zimmerman and Nelson 2006). Wal-Mart’s mistakes in Germany and South Korea are instructive. Even without a background in sociology, most businesspeople know that culture is fundamental to society. Yet they often fail to adjust to new cultures when they enter foreign markets. Today, as Wal-Mart prepares to enter China and India, two massive consumer markets, executives are determined to repeat the company’s success in Latin America, rather than its failure in Germany and South Korea (Nussbaum 2006).

socialpolicy and Culture
Bilingualism The Issue
All over the world, nations face the challenge of how to deal with residential minorities who speak a language different from that of the mainstream culture. Bilingualism refers to the use of two or more languages in a particular setting, such as the workplace or schoolroom, treating each language as equally legitimate. Thus, a teacher of bilingual education may instruct children in their native language while gradually introducing them to the language of the host society. If the curriculum is also bicultural, it will teach children about the mores and folkways of both the dominant culture and the subculture. To what degree should schools in the United States present the curriculum in a language other than English? This issue has prompted a great deal of debate among educators and policymakers.
FIGURE 3-5

PERCENTAGE OF PEOPLE WHO SPEAK A LANGUAGE OTHER THAN ENGLISH AT HOME, BY STATE

MAPPING LIFE NATIONWIDE
WA MT OR ID WY NV CA AZ UT ND SD NE CO KS OK TX AK HI Percentage of People 25.0 or more 15.0–24.9 9.5–14.9 7.0–9.4 2.3–6.9 Note: Data drawn from the 2007 American Community Survey of people five years and over. National average was 19.7 percent. Source: American Community Survey 2008: Table R1601. IA IL MO AR MS LA FL AL GA IN OH KY TN WV VA NC SC MN WI MI PA NY NJ DE MD DC VT ME NH MA RI CT

NM

The Setting

Because languages know no political boundaries, minority languages are common in most nations. For example, Hindi is the most widely spoken language in India, and English is used widely for official purposes, but 18 other languages are officially recognized in the nation of about 1 billion people. According to the Bureau of the Census, 59 million residents of the United States over age five—that’s about 19 percent of the population—spoke a language other than English as their primary language at home in 2007 (Figure 3-5). Indeed, 32 different languages are each spoken by at least 200,000 resi-dents of this country (Bureau of the Census 2006b; Shin and Bruno 2003). Throughout the world, schools must deal with incoming students who speak many different languages. Do bilingual programs in the United States help these children to learn English? It is difficult to reach firm conclusions because bilingual programs in general vary so widely in their quality and approach. They differ in the length of the transition to English and in how long they allow students to remain in bilingual classrooms. Moreover, results have been mixed. In the years since California effectively dismantled its bilingual education program, reading

and math scores of students with limited English proficiency rose dramatically, especially in the lower grades. Yet a major overview of 17 different studies, done at Johns Hopkins University, found that students who are offered lessons in both English and their home languages make better progress than similar students who are taught only in English (R. Slavin and Cheung 2003).

Sociological Insights
For a long time, people in the United States demanded conformity to a single language. This demand coincided with the functionalist view that language serves to unify members of a society. Immigrant children from Europe and Asia—including young Italians, Jews, Poles, Chinese, and Japanese—were expected to learn English once they entered school. In some cases, immigrant children were actually forbidden to speak their native languages on school grounds. Little respect was granted to immigrants’ cultural traditions; a young person would often be teased about his or her “funny” name, accent, or style of dress. 69

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allows students to take their mother tongue as a second language, be it Chinese, Malay, or Tamil. In many nations, language dominance is a regional issue—for example, in Miami or along the Tex-Mex border, where Spanish speaking is prevalent. A particularly virulent bilingual hot spot is Quebec, the French-speaking province of Canada. The Québécois, as they are known, represent 83 percent of the province’s population, but only 25 percent of Canada’s total population. A law implemented in 1978 mandated education in French for all Quebec’s children except those whose parents or siblings had learned English elsewhere in Canada. While special laws like this one have advanced French in the province, dissatisfied Québécois have tried to form their own separate country. In 1995, the people of Quebec indicated their preference of remaining united with Canada by only the narrowest of margins (50.5 percent). Language and language-related cultural areas both unify and divide this nation of 33 million people (The Economist 2005b; Schaefer 2010). Policymakers in the United States have been somewhat ambivalent in dealing with the issue of bilingualism. In 1965, the Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA) provided for bilingual, bicultural education. In the 1970s, the federal government took Policy Initiatives an active role in establishing the proper form for bilingual proBilingualism has policy implications largely in two areas: efforts grams. However, more recently, federal policy has been less supto maintain language purity and programs to enhance bilingual portive of bilingualism, and local school districts have been forced education. Nations vary dramatically in their tolerance for a to provide an increased share of funding for their bilingual provariety of languages. China continues to tighten its cultural congrams. Yet bilingual programs are an expense that many commutrol over Tibet by extending instruction of Mandarin, a Chinese nities and states are unwilling to pay for and are quick to cut back. dialect, from high school into the elementary schools, which In 1998, voters in California approved a proposition that all but will now be bilingual along with Tibetan. In contrast, nearby eliminated bilingual education: it requires instruction in English Singapore establishes English as the medium of instruction but for 1.4 million children who are not fluent in the language. In the United States, repeated efforts FIGURE 3-6 PROPORTION OF IMMIGRANT GROUP MEMBERS have been made to introduce a constitutional amendment declaring English IN SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA WHO SPEAK as the nation’s official language. In 2006, THE MOTHER TONGUE, BY GENERATION the issue arose once again during debates 1.0 over two extremely controversial conChinese gressional proposals—a House bill that Mexicans 0.9 would have criminalized the presence of Salvadorans-Guatemalans illegal immigrants in the United States 0.8 Koreans and expanded the penalties for aiding Other Latin Americans 0.7 Vietnamese them, and a Senate bill that offered some White Europeans illegal immigrants a path to citizenship. 0.6 Filipinos In an attempt to reach a compromise Other Asians between the two sides, legislative leaders 0.5 introduced a proposal to make English 0.4 the national language. As they described it, the legislation would not completely 0.3 outlaw bilingual or multilingual gov0.2 ernment services. As of 2008, 30 states had declared English their official lan0.1 guage—an action that is now more symbolic than legislative in its significance. 0 Public concern over a potential decline 1 1.5 2 2.5 3 3.5 4 in the use of English appears to be overGeneration in the United States blown. In reality, most immigrants and their offspring quickly become fluent Note: Based on a survey of 5,703 people in Metropolitan Los Angeles and San Diego from 2000 to 2004. Generation 1.5 includes those who came to the United States before age 15. Generation 2 includes those who in English and abandon their mother were born in the United States to at least one foreign-born parent. Generation 3 includes those who were born tongue. Figure 3-6 presents data from in the United States to U.S.-born parents, but had one or more foreign-born grandparents. Southern California, a region with a high Source: Rumbaut et al. 2006:456. Recent decades have seen challenges to this pattern of forced obedience to the dominant ideology. Beginning in the 1960s, active movements for Black pride and ethnic pride insisted that people regard the traditions of all racial and ethnic subcultures as legitimate and important. Conflict theorists explain this development as a case of subordinated language minorities seeking opportunities for self-expression. Partly as a result of these challenges, people began to view bilingualism as an asset. It seemed to provide a sensitive way of assisting millions of non-Englishspeaking people in the United States to learn English in order to function more effectively within the society. The perspective of conflict theory also helps us to understand some of the attacks on bilingual programs. Many of them stem from an ethnocentric point of view, which holds that any deviation from the majority is bad. This attitude tends to be expressed by those who wish to stamp out foreign influence wherever it occurs, especially in our schools. It does not take into account that success in bilingual education may actually have beneficial results, such as decreasing the number of high school dropouts and increasing the number of Hispanics in colleges and universities.
Proportion

proportion of immigrants. It shows a steady, rapid move toward English, particularly in the first generation. Despite the presence of a large Latin enclave in the region, even Spanish-speaking immigrants quickly become speakers of English. Nevertheless, many people are impatient with those immigrants who continue to use their mother tongue. The release in 2006 of “Nuestro Himno,” the Spanish-language version of the “Star-Spangled Banner,” produced a strong public reaction: 69 percent of those who were surveyed on the topic said the anthem should be sung only in English. In reaction against the Spanish version, at least one congressman defiantly sang the national anthem in English—with incorrect lyrics. And the proprietor of a restaurant in Philadelphia posted signs advising patrons that he would accept orders for his famous steak sandwiches only in English. Throughout the year, passions ran high as policymakers debated how much support to afford people who speak other languages (J. Carroll 2006; U.S. English 2009). In the end, the immigrant’s experience, whether in the United States or Australia, is not only about learning a new language. It

is about learning a whole new culture—a new totality of socially transmitted customs, knowledge, material objects, and behavior (Viramontes 2007).

Let’s Discuss
1. Have you attended a school with a number of students for whom English is a second language? If so, did the school set up a special bilingual program? Was it effective? What is your opinion of such programs? 2. The ultimate goal of both English-only and bilingual programs is for foreign-born students to become proficient in English. Why should the type of program students attend matter so much to so many people? List all the reasons you can think of for supporting or opposing such programs. What do you see as the primary reason? 3. Besides bilingualism, can you think of another issue that has become controversial recently because of a clash of cultures? If so, analyze the issue from a sociological point of view.

gettinginvolved
To get involved in the debate over bilingualism, visit this book’s Online Learning Center, which offers links to relevant Web sites.

www.mhhe.com/schaefer12e

MASTERING THIS CHAPTER
Summary
Culture is the totality of learned, socially transmitted customs, knowledge, material objects, and behavior. This chapter examines the basic elements that make up a culture, social practices common to all cultures, and variations that distinguish one culture from another. 1. A shared culture helps to define the group or society to which we belong. 2. Anthropologist George Murdock compiled a list of cultural universals, or common practices found in every culture, including marriage, sports, cooking, medicine, and sexual restrictions. 3. People who assume that their own culture is superior to others engage in ethnocentrism. In contrast, cultural relativism is the practice of viewing other people’s behavior from the perspective of their own culture. 4. Human culture is constantly expanding through the process of innovation, which includes both discovery and invention. 5. Diffusion—the spread of cultural items from one place to another—has fostered globalization. But people resist ideas that seem too foreign, as well as those they perceive as threatening to their own values and beliefs. 6. In a sense, a subculture can be thought of as a small culture that exists within a larger, dominant culture. Countercultures are subcultures that deliberately oppose aspects of the larger culture. 7. Language, an important element of culture, includes speech, written characters, numerals, and symbols, as well as gestures and other forms of nonverbal communication. Language both describes culture and shapes it. 8. Sociologists distinguish between norms in two ways, classifying them either as formal or informal or as mores or folkways. 9. The formal norms of a culture will carry the heaviest sanctions; informal norms will carry light sanctions. 10. The dominant ideology of a culture is the set of cultural beliefs and practices that help to maintain powerful social, economic, and political interests. 11. The social policy of bilingualism calls for the use of two or more languages, treating each as equally legitimate. It is supported by those who want to ease the transition of non-native-language speakers into a host society, but opposed by those who adhere to a single cultural tradition and language.

Critical Thinking Questions
1. Select three cultural universals from George Murdock’s list (see page 54) and analyze them from a functionalist perspective. Why are these practices found in every culture? What functions do they serve? 2. Drawing on the theories and concepts presented in this chapter, apply sociological analysis to one subculture with which you are familiar. Describe the norms, values, argot, and sanctions evident in that subculture. 3. In what ways is the dominant ideology of the United States evident in the nation’s literature, music, movies, theater, television programs, and sporting events?

71

Key Terms
Argot Specialized language used by members of a group or subculture. (page 58) Bilingualism The use of two or more languages in a particular setting, such as the workplace or schoolroom, treating each language as equally legitimate. (69) Counterculture A subculture that deliberately opposes certain aspects of the larger culture. (60) Cultural relativism The viewing of people’s behavior from the perspective of their own culture. (55) Cultural universal A common practice or belief found in every culture. (54) Culture The totality of learned, socially transmitted customs, knowledge, material objects, and behavior. (53) Culture industry The worldwide media industry that standardizes the goods and services demanded by consumers. (54) Culture lag A period of maladjustment when the nonmaterial culture is still struggling to adapt to new material conditions. (58) Culture shock The feeling of surprise and disorientation that people experience when they encounter cultural practices that are different from their own. (60) Culture war The polarization of society over controversial cultural elements. (66) Diffusion The process by which a cultural item spreads from group to group or society to society. (57) Discovery The process of making known or sharing the existence of an aspect of reality. (56) Dominant ideology A set of cultural beliefs and practices that helps to maintain powerful social, economic, and political interests. (66) Ethnocentrism The tendency to assume that one’s own culture and way of life represent the norm or are superior to all others. (54) Folkway A norm governing everyday behavior whose violation raises comparatively little concern. (63) Formal norm A norm that has been written down and that specifies strict punishments for violators. (63) Informal norm A norm that is generally understood but not precisely recorded. (63) Innovation The process of introducing a new idea or object to a culture through discovery or invention. (56) Invention The combination of existing cultural items into a form that did not exist before. (56) Language An abstract system of word meanings and symbols for all aspects of culture; includes gestures and other nonverbal communication. (61) Law Governmental social control. (63) Material culture The physical or technological aspects of our daily lives. (58) Mores Norms deemed highly necessary to the welfare of a society. (63) Nonmaterial culture Ways of using material objects, as well as customs, beliefs, philosophies, governments, and patterns of communication. (58) Norm An established standard of behavior maintained by a society. (63) Sanction A penalty or reward for conduct concerning a social norm. (65) Sapir-Whorf hypothesis A hypothesis concerning the role of language in shaping our interpretation of reality. It holds that language is culturally determined. (61) Society A fairly large number of people who live in the same territory, are relatively independent of people outside their area, and participate in a common culture. (53) Sociobiology The systematic study of how biology affects human social behavior. (55) Subculture A segment of society that shares a distinctive pattern of mores, folkways, and values that differs from the pattern of the larger society. (58) Symbol A gesture, object, or word that forms the basis of human communication. (62) Technology Cultural information about how to use the material resources of the environment to satisfy human needs and desires. (57) Value A collective conception of what is considered good, desirable, and proper—or bad, undesirable, and improper—in a culture. (65)

Self-Quiz
Read each question carefully and then select the best answer.

1. Which of the following is an aspect of culture?
a. b. c. d. a comic book the patriotic attachment to the flag of the United States slang words all of the above

c. diffusion d. cultural relativism

5. Which of the following statements is true according to the Sapir-Whorf hypothesis?
a. b. c. d. Language simply describes reality. Language does not transmit stereotypes related to race. Language precedes thought. Language is not an example of a cultural universal.

2. People’s needs for food, shelter, and clothing are examples of what George
Murdock referred to as a. norms. b. folkways. c. cultural universals. d. cultural practices.

6. Which of the following statements about norms is correct?
a. People do not follow norms in all situations. In some cases, they evade a norm because they know it is weakly enforced. b. In some instances, behavior that appears to violate society’s norms may actually represent adherence to the norms of a particular group. c. Norms are violated in some instances because one norm conflicts with another. d. all of the above

3. What term do sociologists use to refer to the process by which a cultural item spreads from group to group or society to society? a. diffusion b. globalization c. innovation d. cultural relativism

7. Which of the following statements about values is correct?
a. Values never change. b. The values of a culture may change, but most remain relatively stable during any one person’s lifetime. c. Values are constantly changing; sociologists view them as being very unstable. d. all of the above

4. The appearance of Starbucks coffeehouses in China is a sign of what aspect of culture? a. innovation b. globalization

72

8. Which of the following terms describes the set of cultural beliefs and practices that help to maintain powerful social, economic, and political interests? a. mores b. dominant ideology c. consensus d. values

c. countercultures. d. dominant ideologies.

10. What is the term used when one places a priority on understanding other cultures, rather than dismissing them as “strange” or “exotic”? a. ethnocentrism b. culture shock c. cultural relativism d. cultural value

9. Terrorist groups are examples of
a. cultural universals. b. subcultures.

11. ____________________ are gestures, objects, and/or words that form the basis of human communication. 12. ____________________ is the process of introducing a new idea or object to a culture. 13. The bow and arrow, the automobile, and the television are all examples of ____________________ . 14. Sociologists associated with the ____________________ perspective emphasize that language and symbols offer a powerful way for a subculture to maintain its identity. 15. “Put on some clean clothes for dinner” and “Thou shalt not kill” are both examples of ____________________ found in U.S. culture. 16. The United States has strong ____________________ against murder, treason, and other forms of abuse that have been institutionalized into formal norms. 17. From a(n) ____________________ perspective, the dominant ideology has major social significance. Not only do a society’s most powerful groups and institutions control wealth and property; more important, they control the means of production.

18. Countercultures (e.g., hippies) are typically popular among the ____________________, who have the least investment in the existing culture. 19. A person experiences ____________________ ____________________ when he or she feels disoriented, uncertain, out of place, even fearful, when immersed in an unfamiliar culture.

20. From the ____________________ perspective, enthocentrism serves to maintain a sense of solidarity by promoting group pride.

THINKING ABOUT MOVIES
The Namesake (Mira Nair, 2007)
An Indian couple emigrates from Calcutta to New York City to start a new life and a new family. Their firstborn son, Gogol Ganguli (Kal Penn), grows up rejecting his parents’ Bengali culture, even though most of the family’s social ties are to other Bengalis. He adopts colloquial American speech, chooses a wealthy Caucasian woman for his girlfriend, and rechristens himself “Nick.” Then his father’s sudden death makes him rethink his relationship to the Bengali culture. This movie is rife with examples of culture seen from a sociological point of view. Look for the scenes in which Gogol’s parents suffer culture shock after moving to New York City. Watch for examples of bilingualism as Gogol speaks to his family, switching back and forth from English to Bengali.

For Your Consideration
1. What are some of the differences between Gogol’s parents’ values and those of his Caucasian girlfriend? 2. How is language used in the film to reinforce feelings of a shared culture?

Answers 1 (d); 2 (c); 3 (a); 4 (b); 5 (c); 6 (d); 7 (b); 8 (b); 9 (c); 10 (c); 11 Symbols; 12 Innovation; 13 inventions; 14 interactionist; 15 norms; 16 mores; 17 conflict; 18 young; 19 culture shock; 20 functionalist

Smoke Signals (Chris Eyre, 1998)
Lanky, geeky Thomas Builds-the-Fire (Evan Adams) and athletic Victor Joseph (Adam Beach) live on a Coeur d’Alene Indian reservation in Idaho. Thomas’s parents died in a fire when he was a baby; he was saved by Victor’s father. After hearing that Victor’s father has died in Phoenix, the two decide to take a road trip to learn more about the man who played such a pivotal role in their lives. At first Victor does not want his nerdy sidekick’s company, but Thomas has saved enough money to bankroll the trip. The two grow closer as they learn more about themselves and their lost patriarch. This movie portrays the subculture of contemporary Coeur d’Alene Indians who live in the mainstream culture but hold on to their Native American norms and values. Watch for the scene in which Victor tells Thomas how to act “properly stoic,” demonstrating how members of the tribe reinforce the norms of their subculture.

For Your Consideration
1. What informal norms of the Coeur d’Alene culture does the movie show? 2. How do Thomas and Victor deal with the representations of Native American tribal people presented in mainstream films and television?

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    Today I had an assignment for my sociology 101 class. The assignment was to observe the environment around us. The main goal is to see the actions or interactions of people around us. During my observation, I saw a pattern. I was scrupulous on picking the location of to people watch, but ultimately decided the memorial union was the best place, due to the fact that there are typically abundant amounts of students there.…

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    1. The childhood anecdote from the beginning of the chapter shows that racial prejudices and differences are not inborn and they are a result of the way that society shaped a persons image of the different races. Based on this assumption, it is safe to believe that a non-white three year old would be likely to bring home a white “baby sister” because the three year old wouldn’t realize that there is a difference. White people are put at an advantage with an “invisible knapsack of privileges”.…

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    I remember watching and reading Super Size Me in middle school and Food INC. as well in high school. My initial reaction to Super Size Me was disgust. I found the way they treated chickens and how McDonald’s made their food disgusting. Just prior to viewing Super Size Me, I was already visiting fast food places like McDonald’s less frequently and after viewing Super Size Me I rarely ate at a fast food place. My visits to fast food places decreased at a rate to around once a year. However, as time passed my visits to fast food places slowly increased and by sophomore to junior year in high school I actually started to enjoy eating fast food again. By the time I saw Food INC around sophomore to junior year, I was desensitized to eating fast food because of the good taste, the speed, and especially the cheap prices. When I viewed Food INC for the first time in high school, I found it quite boring because I rationalized a belief that “food is food” so I didn’t care at all how food is made as long as it could fill my stomach.…

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    Sociology is the study of the society and the way people interact within it. The field of sociology and trying to study and understand it is very complicating due to the fact that it is such a wide topic. Feelings change along people and nobody can truly explain why people do the things they do. A student attempting suicide out of nowhere is unexplainable or even a random divorce. The unexplainable minds of people and random occurrences really interests me into pursuing this field.…

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