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Jul 4, 2022 · Despite much uncertainty about what culture is, where it comes from, and where it goes once it is gone, two core understandings are of culture as meaning and value. Both value and meaning are...
- Keywords
- Abstract
- Component of constituted cultural knowledge
- Knowledge activation:
- Component of cultural pragmatics
- PART 4: CONCLUSION
- DISCLOSURE STATEMENT
- ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
- Theory and Methods
- Kieran Healy and James Moody
- Institutions and Culture
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- Political and Economic Sociology
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- Lisa A. Keister
- Jeffrey D. Morenoff and David J. Harding
- Individual and Society
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- Sociology and World Regions
- Florencia Torche
- AnnuAl Reviews
- Editor: Frederick P. Morgeson, The Eli Broad College of Business, Michigan State University
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- Complimentary online access to the first volume will be available until January 2015.
beliefs, cognition, culture, meaning, norms, pragmatics, schema, values
I present a brief review of problems in the sociological study of culture, followed by an integrated, interdisciplinary view of culture that eschews extreme contextualism and other orthodoxies. Culture is defined as the conjugate product of two reciprocal, componential processes. The first is a dynamically stable process of collectively made, repro...
(symbolically shared schemata) O.C. and other network flows
use, production, reproduction, transmission Configurations Practical cultural knowledge
Figure 1 (top) Norms and values are, respectively, the weighted prescriptive and affective dimensions of declarative and procedural cultural knowledge structures and practices. They mediate and stabilize the effects of their activation, though imperfectly, allowing some pragmatic changes to filter through. They are themselves changed over time by t...
In this review, I have tried to make sense of culture through an integrated and interdisci-plinary approach that avoids the conventional orthodoxies, one-sided agendas, and intel-lectually paralyzing post-whatnot fads of recent decades that have bedeviled the subject. Culture emerges as a dynamically stable process from the complex interactions of ...
The author is not aware of any affiliations, memberships, funding, or financial holdings that might be perceived as affecting the objectivity of this review.
I thank Professors Steven Pinker and Lo ̈ıc Wacquant for valuable comments on earlier drafts of this paper. All errors in the present version are entirely my own.
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A Comparative View of Ethnicity and Political Engagement
The Political Mobilization of Firms and Industries Edward T. Walker and Christopher M. Rea
Political Parties and the Sociological Imagination: Past, Present, and Future Directions
Taxes and Fiscal Sociology Isaac William Martin and Monica Prasad
Immigrants and African Americans Mary C. Waters, Philip Kasinitz, and Asad L. Asad Caste in Contemporary India: Flexibility and Persistence
Intersectionality and the Sociology of HIV/AIDS: Past, Present, and Future Research Directions Celeste Watkins-Hayes
Ethnic Diversity and Its Effects on Social Cohesion Tom van der Meer and Jochem Tolsma
Warmth of the Welcome: Attitudes Toward Immigrants and Immigration Policy in the United States
Hispanics in Metropolitan America: New Realities and Old Debates
Where, When, Why, and For Whom Do Residential Contexts Matter? Moving Away from the Dichotomous Understanding of Neighborhood Effects
Somebody’s Children or Nobody’s Children? How the Sociological Perspective Could Enliven Research on Foster Care Christopher Wildeman and Jane Waldfogel
Intergenerational Mobility and Inequality: The Latin American Case
A Critical Overview of Migration and Development: The Latin American Challenge Ra ́ul Delgado-Wise
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Culture is the social heritage of an organized group or community, the shared behavior patterns, subjective constructs and productive relationships that are learned through the course of socialization. These shared norms recognize members of a particular cultural group as unique setting it apart from other teams.
In the wake of the ‘cultural turn,’ cultural sociology constitutes itself drawing on various theoretical resources from the social sciences and humanities: critical theory, cultural anthropology, phenomenology, structuralism, and poststructuralism among others.
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May 15, 2018 · This essay examines the meaning of culture and provides several possible titles and topics that may be used as starting points for developing a paper on culture. It discusses the definition of culture, how culture is developed, and how cultures change.
Jan 1, 2013 · Core debates revolve around the content of culture, its relationship to society and civilization as well as its function and role in the human condition. Having deliberately dealt vaguely with...
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Culture consists in patterned ways of thinking, feeling and reacting, acquired and transmitted mainly by symbols, constituting the distinctive achievements of human groups, including their embodiments in artifacts; the essential core of culture consists of traditional (i.e. historically derived and selected) ideas and especially their attached ...