Unit 3 AP geo - culture

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69 Terms

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Culture

Shared practices, technologies, attitudes, and behaviors transmitted by the members of a society that are not the result of biological inheritance (socially constructed)

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Ethnicity

A group of people who share a common cultural identity

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Race

Historical classification that is used to categorize human populations with shared physical traits in (not culture)

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Culture trait

A single attribute of a culture, such as food, preferences, architecture, and land use

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Material culture traits

Clothing, food, literature/art, houses/public buildings

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Nonmaterial culture traits

Language/religion, education systems, government/loss systems, and music/holidays

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Ethnocentrism

Touching another culture based on the values of one’s own culture (language, religion, customs)

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Cultural relativism

The idea that a persons, beliefs, values and practices should be understood based on that person’s own culture rather than be judged against the criteria of another

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Cultural landscape

The combination of physical features, agriculture and industrial practices, religious and linguistic characteristics, sequent occupancy, traditional and postmodern architecture, and land used pattern

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Sequent occupance

The combined imprint on an area when it has been inhabited by a succession of cultures (Example: buildings, transportation systems farms, irrigation of recreation, facilities)

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Indigenous communities

The original settlers of an area (pre-invasion/colonialism) who have retained their culture apart from the colonizer’s (Example: Native Americans, First Nations, and Aborigines)

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Ethnic neighborhood

An area within a city occupied by a distinctive minority culture (Example little Italy in NYC and Chinatown in Chicago

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Gender

Social and cultural differences between males and females not (biological differences)

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Gender role

Learn behaviors that are deemed appropriate to gender as determined by cultural norms

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Role of women in the workforce

women engaged in paid work outside the home has increased substantially over 2nd half of the 20th century

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Gendered spaces

Areas in which gender expression is the other welcome or unwelcome

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Sense of place

Term used to connote attachment to and comfort in a particular place with a strong identity that is deeply felt by inhabitants

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Strong sense of place

Sense of place that is felt by visitors as well as inhabitants

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Place making

How a culture makes a place for their identity by shaping the landscape to show what they believe and value

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Centripetal forces

Forces that unite a country/ culture/ religion

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Centrifugal forces

Forces that divide a country/ region/ religion

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Cultural diffusion

The spread of an idea, innovation, cultural trend, or disease from its source area to other areas

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Relocation diffusion

Type of cultural diffusion when an innovation or idea spreads by the actual movement of individuals who have adopted the idea and carry it to a new place

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Expansion diffusion

Type of cultural diffusion when an innovation or idea develops in a source area and remains strong there while also spreading outward the innovation or idea moves through fixed populations

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Contagious diffusion

Type of expansion diffusion where nearly all individuals are affected as it spreads outwards

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Hierarchical diffusion

Type of expansion diffusion when particular groups are affected as it leapfrogs over areas

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Stimulus diffusion

Type of expansion diffusion where a small portion of the population adopts and idea or modifies it

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Lingua Franca

A language mutually understood by people who speak different languages, usually for the purpose of trade

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Creolization

The blending of European, Amerindian, and African cultures in the New World as a result of colonialism to create something new

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Colonialism

The policy of acquiring control over another country, occupying it with settlers and exploiting it economically

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Cultural imperialism

The dominance of one culture over another, historically, often occurred as a result of colonization

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Trade

People move from place to place around the world as they trade and come into contact with new ideas and cultural practices

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Culture is socially constructed

The practices and beliefs (culture) that appear to be nature and obvious to people who accept it, but are actually learned behaviors

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Culture change

Occurs through media, technological change, politics, economics, and social relationships

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Globalization

The process of increased interconnectedness among countries most notably in areas of economics, politics, and culture

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Urbanization

Refers to the movement of people to towns: cities and the resulting expansion of the rural countryside to absorb increase in people

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time space convergence

increasing connectivity between cultures that occurs as a result of communication technology

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cultural convergence

cultures become more alike as their interactions increase

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cultural divergence

the tendency for culture groups to disassociate from others in order to protect or preserve their culture from influence or change

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local culture

culture traits of usually small, traditional, homogeneous, ritual communities

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loss of indigenous languages

consequence of colonialism and policies of assimilation

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culture hearth

the source of civilization: place where a civilization began and their ideas and practices spread to surrounding areas

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civilization

a society with an advanced state of social development processing record keeping (writing), advanced cities (urbanization), technology, specialized workers, complex institutions (government, religion)

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language

method of communication (spoken or written)

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language family

a group of languages with a shared but fairly distant origin

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dialect

variant of standard language along regional or ethnic lines

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world religions

belief systems that originated in a hearth and diffused

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ethnic cultures

members share cultural heritage, ancestry, origin myth, history, homeland, language/ dialect, symbolic systems, rituals, cuisine, dressing styles, art, or physical appearance

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indo-european language family

family of languages believed to all come from a single language (proto-indo-european) that spread outward

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conquest theory

theorizes that the source of the indo-european language lay somewhat in the steppes of present-day Ukraine and Russia more than 5000 years ago and spread conquerors on horseback who moved westward

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agriculture theory

theorizes that the source of the indo-european language lay somewhere in the mountainous terrain of Anatolia in modern Turkey between 7000 and 9000 years ago and spread with the diffusion of agriculture

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south asia

the hearth of Hinduism, sikhism, and Buddhism

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southwest asia

the heath for Islam, judaism, and christianity

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universalizing

religions that actively seek converts because they view themselves as offering belief systems of universal applicability and appeal

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buddhism

founded by Siddhartha Gautama in northern India with roots in Hinduism. Lost its following in India, becoming the most widespread religion in East Asia. Spread by relocation diffusion to East Asia. Spread by expansion diffusion in China, Korea, Thailand, Burma, and Japan

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Christianity

religion with roots in Judaism, founded in Southwest Asia based on the Old Testament and the teachings of Jesus as told in the New Testament. Spread by both relocation and expansion diffusion throughout the world.

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Islam

religion with roots in Judaism, founded in Southwest Asia and based on the belief that there is one God, Allah, and that Muhammad was Allah’s prophet. Spread by expansion diffusion in Southwest Asia and Africa and by relocation diffusion to Southeast Asia, Europe, and the U.S

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Sikhism

religion with roots in both Islam and Hinduism, founded in Northern India and based on the teachings of Guru Nanak. Spread by expansion diffusion throughout throughout India and by relocation diffusion to Southeast Asia, Europe, and North America.

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ethnic religion

religions that do not actively seeks converts and are generally found near the hearth or spread through relocation diffusion

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hinduism

oldest major religion founded in India that cannot be traced to one founder and is a collection of religious beliefs that is strongly connected to Hindu. Based on the belief of reincarnation. Spread through expansion and Relocation diffusion.

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Judaism

religion founded by Abraham in Southwest Asia that is believed by many to be the first monotheistic religion dedicated to serving one God. Spread by relocation diffusion as a result of Dispora.

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Animism

probably human’s oldest religion, pre-dating civilization and centered on the belief that inanimate objects, such as mountains, rivers, and trees possess spirits and should be revered. Found among Native Americans in North and South America and among traditional Africans as well as other indigenous groups around the world.

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acculturation

process in which members of one cultural group adopt the beliefs and behaviors of another group, but still remain some original uniqueness; often occurs as a result of colonization or immigration

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assimilation

process by which a person or persons acquire the social and psychological characteristics of a group and cannot be distinguished from anyone else

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multiculturalism

maintaining a diversity of ethnic cultures within a community that are valued and respected for their unique differences

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syncretism

development of a new cultural trait as a result of the blending of two distinct by interacting cultures

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placelessness

loss of distinct local features (uniqueness) in favor of standardized landscapes which happens as result of pervasiveness of pop culture and mass production and availability of a wide variety of consumables

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pop culture

culture traits of large, heterogenous, urban populations (usually rapidly changing)

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interfaith boundaries

conflict between the worlds major faiths