Overview: What is Culture? (DP IB Psychology)
Revision Note
Written by: Claire Neeson
Reviewed by: Lucy Vinson
Overview: What is Culture?
What is culture?
Culture refers to the products of socialisation within any organised group, society or nation and involves a set of rules, norms and customs that are agreed by the members of that group
Culture is active rather than passive; each individual contributes to the culture in which they were born – and to the cultures they encounter throughout their life
Culture is created by people and in turn influences the development of people i.e. it is a bi-directional process/phenomenon
Culture is not static: it is subject to changes wrought by time, by advancing technologies, by social change, by geographical change
Deep culture refers to the attitudes, beliefs and values that underpin daily life and habits within that culture; it may not be immediately obvious as it is inherent in cultural norms and behaviours which are familiar to those within the culture
Examples of deep culture include belief in life after death; that cows are sacred; that everyone has the right to free speech
Surface culture is the manifestation of deep culture i.e. observable and tangible behaviours, customs and rituals
Examples of surface culture include eating food with chopsticks; performing specific dances at festivals; living in houses on stilts
Culture and psychological research
In the early days of psychology, research was carried out in Western, individualistic countries e.g the USA, the UK, Western Europe
It was assumed that this research revealed universal truths that could be equally applied to all people: this is known as an etic approach to investigating behaviour
An etic approach is aligned with ethnocentrism: attempting to explain all behaviour using samples which only represent one specific culture (usually individualistic)
An imposed etic occurs when for example a Western researcher from an individualistic culture studies a different cultural group and draws conclusions about their behaviour using their own cultural standards as a measure
One way of avoiding an etic approach is to conduct research from within a specific culture in terms that are meaningful to that culture: this is known as an emic approach to investigating behaviour
An emic approach is aligned with cultural relativism, the idea that only those within a culture can properly explain its behaviour
Margaret Mead was one of the pioneers of emic research from the 1920s onwards.
Examiner Tips and Tricks
If you use the terms ‘etic’ and/or ‘emic’ in an exam (and don’t worry, you are not required to!) then make sure you don’t confuse them as each means the opposite of the other. One good way to separate them is to consider that ‘etic’ sounds like ‘ethnocentric’ – and both have almost the same meaning so this should help to avoid confusion (and missed marks) in the exam
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