British Cultural Studies: An Overview


ISBN 9783656532279
16 Seiten, Taschenbuch/Paperback
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Research Paper (undergraduate) from the year 2010 in the subject Didactics - English - Applied Geography, grade: 2, University of Education Heidelberg, language: English, abstract: A large number of people believe that everything that is man - made can be seen as culture.

Moran leaves no doubt about those products' importance, when he writes: Products, the

visible dimension of culture, are the gateway to the new culture, the new way of life (p. 48).

But are there only architecture, paintings, literature, music, language, and food which come to

mind if we think of a country's culture? The iceberg model shows that these aspects represent

only a small amount of culture that, just like the visible section of an iceberg above the

waterline, can be seen easily and understood clearly. However, there are a lot more facets,

also like an iceberg, that can only be suspected or imagined. These parts of the iceberg are its

foundation and the iceberg model makes clear that it is impossible to understand people from

different cultural backgrounds, unless we are able to appreciate what the foundations of their

culture are. But no matter how many different definitions of the term "culture" exist, a lot of

them cover problems concerning the human beings and their life in a community. This implies

that we can't learn about another country's culture by reading a lot of books about it, but we

need the encounter with another way of life. In that way, culture can also be seen as a concept

which regulates the interpersonal cohabitation of human beings in a collective. This collective

does not have to be a country by all means, but can also be a group of people with the same

interests. If some people who are fond of a special musical genre such as goth, pool together,

they have their own culture, too and it is not necessary that they live in the same country. But

it is not merely the music that connects them, but rather "shared interpretations about beliefs,

values, and norms, which affect the behaviors" (Lustig, Koester, 2003, p. 27) and influence

the way their thinking is organized. [.]
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