Society and culture

11,727 views 22 slides Aug 03, 2019
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About This Presentation

society and culture


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SOCIETY AND CULTURE BY TASNEEM SAIFUDDIN M.PHIL SCHOLAR

CULTURE Culture  consists of the beliefs, behaviors, objects, and other characteristics common to the members of a particular group or society. Through culture, people and groups define themselves, conform to society's shared values, and contribute to society. Thus, culture includes many societal aspects: language, customs, values, norms, mores, rules, tools, technologies, products, organizations, and institutions

CULTURE Sociologists define  society  as the people who interact in such a way as to share a common culture. The  cultural bond  may be ethnic or racial, based on gender, or due to shared beliefs, values, and activities. The term  society  can also have a  geographic meaning and refer to people who share a common culture in a particular location. For example, people living in arctic climates developed different cultures from those living in desert cultures. 

DIFFERENCE BETWEEN SOCIETY AND CULTURE

SOCIAL STRUCTURE

SOCIAL STRUCTURE Social structure is the organized set of social institutions and patterns of institutionalized relationships that together compose society. Social structure is a product of  social interaction  and directly determines it. Social structures are not immediately visible to the untrained observer, however, they are always present and affect all dimensions of human experience in society.

FUNCTIONS OF A SOCIETY Have a shared set of goals System of member replacement Adequate means of communication Satisfaction of physical needs Socialization Specialized worked pattern Leisure

FUNCTIONS OF A SOCIETY Religiosity Production function( association with the distribution of the goods also) Social Control/ Power management Preservation of Order Management of Education Management of Economy Preservation and transmission of Culture

INDIVIDUAL STATUS AND ROLE IN A SOCIETY   Status  is our relative social position within a group, while a  role  is the part our society expects us to play in a given status.  For example, a man may have the status of father in his family.  Because of this status, he is expected to fulfill a role for his children that in most societies requires him to nurture, educate, guide, and protect them.  Of course, mothers usually have complementary roles.

TYPES OF STATUS Achieved statuses  are ones that are acquired by doing something.  For instance, someone becomes a criminal by committing a crime.  A soldier earns the status of a good warrior by achievements in battle and by being brave.  A woman becomes a mother by having a baby.  She also can acquire the status of widow by the death of her husband . A scribed statuses  are the result of being born into a particular family or being born male or female.  Being a prince by birth or being the first of four children in a family are ascribed statuses.  We do not make a decision to choose them-  

ROLE OF INDIVIDUAL IN SOCIETY To take care of the surroundings To protect environment To follow the laws To stop Crimes Respect the rights of others

SOCIAL INTERACTION A social interaction is an exchange between two or more individuals and is a building block of society. Social interaction can be studied between groups of two (dyads), three (triads) or larger social groups. By interacting with one another, people design rules, institutions and systems within which they seek to live. Symbols are used to communicate the expectations of a given society to those new to it.

SOCIAL INTERACTION social interaction requires a mutual orientation. The spying of one on another is not social interaction if the other is unaware. Nor do the behaviors of rapist and victim constitute social interaction if the victim is treated as a physical object; nor behavior between guard and prisoner, torturer and tortured, machine gunner and enemy soldier. Indeed, wherever people treat each other as object, things, or animals, or consider each other as reflex machines or only cause-effect phenomena, there is not social interaction. Such interaction may comprise a system; it may be organized, controlled, or regimented. It is not, however, social as I am using the term.

CULTURE The word 'culture' hails from the Latin word  cultura  which is derived from  colere  that means, 'to cultivate'. Our culture has a major share in cultivating our minds. The common traits and beliefs that form the mindset of a group, define their culture.

Culture refers to the pattern of human activity and the symbols that give significance to them. Culture manifests itself in the forms of art, literature, clothing, customs, language, and religion. The way people live and what they believe constitutes their culture. Their principles and moral values also form an important part of their culture. People from different parts of the world have different cultural values. Cultural differences contribute to the diversity in people's thinking and living styles.

CHARACTERISTICS OF CULTURE Culture is learned Culture is shared Culture changes Culture takes years to formed Culture cannot be isolated Culture is essential Culture is transmitted across generations

CULTURAL DIVERSITY The phrase cultural diversity can also refer to having different cultures respect each other's differences. The phrase "cultural diversity" is also sometimes used to mean the variety of human  societies  or  cultures  in a specific region, or in the world as a whole. 

CULTURAL DIVERSITY INE DUCATION Because the idea of “diversity” is not even that straightforward. Not only must schools recognize diversity evident among broad racial and ethnic groups (e.g., Asian or Hispanic), but the diversity within these groups must be recognized as well. For example Chinese and Japanese students may share common cultural characteristics as a result of being Asian, but will also have distinctly Chinese and Japanese cultural characteristics that differ from each other

Teachers have a particular responsibility to recognize and structure their lessons to reflect student differences. This encourages students to recognize themselves and others as individuals.  We can facilitate the process of learning overall We can help students assimilate what they learn with what they already know. and what they dont kow

ROLE OF EDUCATION IN PROMOTING AND PRESERVING OUR CULTURE Education brings awareness With Education comparative analysis of different cultures can be done Education brightens our views. Educations helps us to convey our cultural message China, Turkey , Japan are the countries who promote their cultures by their education

ACTIVITY Construct an activity that is helpful for the children to know about our culture, Or plan any school event to promote Pakistani culture