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  2. Culture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Culture

    Non-material culture refers to the non-physical ideas that individuals have about their culture, including values, belief systems, rules, norms, morals, language, organizations, and institutions, while material culture is the physical evidence of a culture in the objects and architecture they make or have made.

  3. A Scientific Theory of Culture and Other Essays - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A_Scientific_Theory_of...

    As the name implies, it focuses on Malinowki's view of culture. [1] [2] [3] [5] It also contains a short essay on James Frazer. [6] Margaret Mead in her review for the American Journal of Sociology noted that "[t]his book ... will serve the great purpose of communicating the concept of culture to others."

  4. Keywords: A Vocabulary of Culture and Society - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Keywords:_A_Vocabulary_of...

    Keywords: A Vocabulary of Culture and Society is a book by the Welsh Marxist academic Raymond Williams published in 1976 by Croom Helm.. Originally intended to be published along with the author's 1958 work Culture and Society, this work examines the history of more than a hundred words that are familiar and yet confusing: Art, Bureaucracy, Culture, Educated, Management, Masses, Nature ...

  5. Culturology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Culturology

    Fabrice Rivault, for instance, was the first scholar to formalize and propose international political culturology as a subfield of international relations in order to understand the global cultural system, as well as its numerous subsystems, and explain how cultural variables interact with politics and economics to impact world affairs. [13]

  6. Culture theory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Culture_theory

    According to many theories that have gained wide acceptance among anthropologists, culture exhibits the way that humans interpret their biology and their environment. According to this point of view, culture becomes such an integral part of human existence that it is the human environment, and most cultural change can be attributed to human ...

  7. Sociology of culture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sociology_of_culture

    In the beginning of the cultural turn, sociologists tended to use qualitative methods and hermeneutic approaches to research, focusing on meanings, words, artifacts and symbols. "Culture" has since become an important concept across many branches of sociology, including historically quantitative and model-based subfields, such as social ...

  8. Cultural anthropology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cultural_anthropology

    Cultural relativism involves specific epistemological and methodological claims. Whether or not these claims require a specific ethical stance is a matter of debate. This principle should not be confused with moral relativism. Cultural relativism was in part a response to Western ethnocentrism. Ethnocentrism may take obvious forms, in which one ...

  9. Cultural psychology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cultural_psychology

    Cultural psychology is often confused with cross-cultural psychology.Even though both fields influence each other, cultural psychology is distinct from cross-cultural psychology in that cross-cultural psychologists generally use culture as a means of testing the universality of psychological processes rather than determining how local cultural practices shape psychological processes. [12]