Unit 3: Cultural Patterns and Processes

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50 Terms

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Culture

The shared set of behaviors, values, beliefs, and material objects a group uses to make sense of the world and organize daily life.

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Nonmaterial culture

The ideas and meanings of a culture, such as religion, language, norms, values, folklore, and expectations for social interaction.

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Material culture

The physical things people make and use, such as architecture, clothing, tools, foods, art objects, land-use patterns, and sacred-space design.

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Art (as a cultural identifier)

A component of culture that often signifies cultural influence, identifies groups, and serves as a source of local pride.

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Cultural trait

A single attribute of culture (e.g., speaking Spanish, practicing Islam, a staple food, a greeting, or a roof style).

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Cultural complex

A set of interconnected cultural traits that function together (e.g., a religion’s beliefs, rituals, sacred architecture, dietary rules, and holidays).

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Cultural region

An area of bounded space with a homogeneous cultural characteristic (one or more components of culture), typically with fuzzy borders.

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Formal (uniform) region

A region defined by a shared trait that is relatively consistent throughout the area (e.g., where a particular language dominates).

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Functional (nodal) region

A region organized around a node and the connections that flow outward (e.g., a media market spreading popular culture from a city).

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Vernacular (perceptual) region

A region defined by people’s perceptions of an area (e.g., “the Midwest”).

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Border zone (border state)

A transition area where cultural borders are fuzzy and a place partly fits two cultural regions.

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Culture hearth

A localized area where a culture originated or where it has a main population center (core).

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Core and periphery (culture region)

A pattern in which a culture has a strong central area (core) and a wider surrounding area (periphery) where influence may be weaker or mixed.

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Syncretism (cultural synthesis)

The blending of two or more cultural influences into something new; common in religion, music, and food.

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Cultural landscape

The visible imprint of human activity and culture on the natural landscape (e.g., street layouts, buildings, signs, cemeteries, farm shapes).

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Sequent occupance

The idea that a place’s cultural landscape shows layers of history from different groups occupying and modifying the area over time.

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Toponym

A place name that acts as a cultural marker, often revealing Indigenous presence, colonial influence, or political change (renaming).

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Built environment

Human-made surroundings (housing, farms, transportation networks, etc.) shaped by cultural choices about what is appropriate, sacred, efficient, or beautiful.

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Sacred space

Landscapes and sites made distinctive by religion, including houses of worship, pilgrimage routes, cemeteries, burial practices, and land-use restrictions near holy places.

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Diffusion

The process by which a cultural trait, idea, or innovation spreads from one place to another.

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Expansion diffusion

Diffusion in which a trait spreads outward from its origin while remaining strong in the origin area.

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Relocation diffusion

Diffusion that occurs when people move and bring cultural traits with them (e.g., immigrant neighborhoods preserving language and institutions).

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Contagious diffusion

Rapid, widespread diffusion through direct contact among people, like a wave (e.g., slang, fashion, rumors).

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Hierarchical diffusion

Diffusion through a ranked network, often from large cities or influential people to other places and groups.

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Stimulus diffusion

Diffusion in which the underlying idea spreads but is adapted/changed to fit local culture.

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Barriers to diffusion

Factors that limit spread, including physical (distance, mountains), cultural (language, norms), political (borders, censorship), and economic barriers (access).

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Acculturation

Cultural change from sustained contact between groups while each may retain parts of its original culture; traits can be exchanged.

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Assimilation

When a minority group adopts the dominant culture so fully that its distinct identity may weaken (sometimes forced historically).

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Folk culture

Culture practiced by smaller, more homogeneous groups, strongly tied to tradition and place, usually spreading slowly (often via relocation diffusion).

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Popular culture

Cultural traits common in large, heterogeneous societies, heavily shaped by media/corporations and spreading quickly (often via hierarchical diffusion).

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Folk music

Music original to a specific culture/region, often using region-associated instruments; lyrics frequently preserve stories and religious traditions.

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Folklore

Collected stories, spoken-word histories, and writings specific to a culture that express societal history and moral lessons and help define ethical foundations.

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Cultural convergence

The process by which places become more similar due to shared popular culture traits and globalization.

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Cultural divergence

The strengthening of local identities and distinct traits (e.g., language, traditions) often in response to globalization and convergence pressures.

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Glocalization

The adaptation of global products or ideas to local culture, producing hybrid outcomes.

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Cultural appropriation

Using elements of a culture (often marginalized) without understanding, permission, or respect, reinforcing power imbalances—distinct from respectful exchange.

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Cultural imperialism

The dominance of one culture over others, supported by economic/political power, global media, and corporations, potentially weakening local languages and traditions.

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Globalization

Increasing worldwide interconnectedness through trade, communication, migration, and technology that accelerates cultural diffusion in speed and reach.

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Language family

A group of languages with a shared historical origin.

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Language branch

A subdivision within a language family, grouping languages with a closer common origin.

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Language group

A smaller set of languages within a branch that share more recent common ancestry.

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Dialect

A regional variation of a language with distinct vocabulary, grammar, and/or pronunciation; systematic and often tied to identity and politics.

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Official language

A language designated by a state for legal/administrative use; can unify communication but also marginalize minority speakers.

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Lingua franca

A common language used among speakers of different languages for trade, government, education, or wider communication (e.g., English globally today).

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Pidgin

A simplified mixed language with limited grammar and key vocabulary, often formed in trade or colonial contexts.

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Creole

A language that develops when a pidgin becomes a community’s first language and gains complexity over time.

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Universalizing religion

A religion that actively seeks converts and is meant to be practiced by anyone, often diffusing widely through missions, trade, or conquest.

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Ethnic religion

A religion closely tied to a particular ethnic group and region, typically not emphasizing conversion and often remaining regionally concentrated.

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Secularization

The process by which religion becomes less central to social and political life, often meaning reduced institutional influence (varies by region).

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Ethnic enclave

A neighborhood with a high concentration of a particular ethnic group, often supporting cultural preservation and creating distinct cultural landscapes (e.g., signage, markets, worship sites).

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