🧭 Overview
🧠 One-sentence thesis
Culture encompasses the shared patterns of values, beliefs, behaviors, customs, and symbols that groups develop and transmit across generations to enable cooperation and survival.
📌 Key points (3–5)
- What culture includes: language, knowledge, traditions, rituals, tools, objects, arts, food, drink, and values—all the ways groups organize life together.
- How culture works: it is learned (usually without awareness), transmitted through symbols and communication, and passed from generation to generation.
- Culture has two faces: external representations (artifacts, roles, institutions) and internal representations (values, attitudes, beliefs).
- Common confusion: culture feels natural and invisible because we learn it from birth through interaction, observation, and imitation—we rarely notice the messages culture sends.
- Culture is dynamic: all cultures are predisposed both to change (through environment, technology, contact with others) and to resist change.
🧩 What culture encompasses
🗣️ Language and symbols
- Language is one of the words people think of when they think of culture.
- Culture is transmitted through a variety of symbols: language, words, letters, paintings, gestures, etc.
- Communication and culture are linked—communication makes culture a continuous process.
🎨 Tangible and intangible elements
The excerpt lists multiple dimensions of culture:
- Knowledge and stories
- Traditions and rituals
- Tools and objects
- The arts
- Food and drink
- Values
Example: Everyday culture includes clothes, food, holidays, music, knowledge and beliefs, traditions and innovations, and family life—these established cultural norms affect the lives of each social group and each person.
🏛️ External vs internal representations
Culture has both external (e.g., artifacts, roles, institutions) and internal representations (e.g., values, attitudes, beliefs).
- External: the visible, tangible parts—objects, social roles, organizational structures.
- Internal: the invisible, mental parts—what people value, how they think, what they believe.
- Don't confuse: culture is not only "things you can see"; the internal attitudes and beliefs are equally part of culture.
🌱 How culture is learned and transmitted
📚 Culture is learned (the most essential characteristic)
Culture is learned (the most essential characteristic of culture).
- Learning happens through interaction, observation, and imitation.
- Learning cultural perceptions, rules, and behaviors goes on without our being aware of it.
- The essential messages of culture get reinforced and repeated.
- Because culture influences us from birth, we are rarely aware of many of the messages that culture sends.
Example: A person growing up in a community absorbs customs and manners by watching others and participating in daily life, often without consciously thinking "I am learning my culture."
👨👩👧👦 Sources of cultural learning
We learn our culture from a large variety of sources:
- Family
- Church
- School
- Friends
- Society
- Mass media
- Country
Each source teaches and reinforces cultural norms.
🔁 Culture is transmitted from generation to generation
- Culture is passed down through symbols (language, words, letters, paintings, gestures, etc.).
- Communication makes culture a continuous process: cultural habits, principles, values, and attitudes are formulated and communicated to each member of the culture.
- This transmission ensures that the group's way of life persists over time.
🤝 Why culture exists
🏘️ Cooperation and survival
People have grouped together into communities in order to survive. Living together well and smoothly, people developed forms of cooperation which created rules, customs, manners, common habits, behaviors, and ways of life. All of these are called culture.
- Culture emerges from the need to live together effectively.
- It provides the "rules of the game" for cooperation: what behaviors are acceptable, how to communicate, how to organize social life.
🌍 Shared and learned behavior
Culture is shared and learned behavior that is transmitted from one generation to another generation to promote individual and social survival, adaptation, and growth and development.
- Culture is not individual—it is shared by an identifiable group with a common history.
- It serves practical functions: survival, adaptation, growth, and development.
🔄 Culture is dynamic
⚖️ Change and resistance
All cultures are inherently predisposed to change and, at the same time, to resist change.
- Cultures are not static; they evolve.
- Yet they also have mechanisms to preserve core elements and resist disruption.
🌐 Causes of cultural change
Cultural change can have many causes:
- The environment: shifts in climate, resources, or geography.
- Technological inventions: new tools and methods alter how people live and work.
- Contact with other cultures: interaction between societies may produce or inhibit social shifts and changes in cultural practices.
Example: An organization adopting new communication technology may change its internal culture (e.g., norms around meetings or collaboration), while still preserving core values.
🔍 External influence
- Cultures are externally affected via contact between societies.
- This contact can either encourage change (adoption of new ideas) or inhibit it (reinforcement of traditional practices in response to outside pressure).
📖 Defining culture: key formulations
The excerpt provides several complementary definitions:
| Definition focus | Key phrase | Implication |
|---|
| Accumulated pattern | "An accumulated pattern of values, beliefs, and behaviors, shared by an identifiable group of people with a common history and verbal and nonverbal symbol system" | Culture is collective, historical, and symbolic |
| Transmission | "Shared and learned behavior that is transmitted from one generation to another generation" | Culture persists over time through teaching and learning |
| Internal + external | "Culture has both external (e.g., artifacts, roles, institutions) and internal representations (e.g., values, attitudes, beliefs)" | Culture operates on multiple levels—visible and invisible |
| Cooperation | "Forms of cooperation which created rules, customs, manners, common habits, behaviors, and ways of life" | Culture arises from the practical need to live together |
Don't confuse: Culture is not a single thing (like "art" or "food"); it is the entire system of shared meanings, practices, and symbols that a group uses to organize life.