CHAPTER 2 MANY WORLDS: GEOGRAPHIES OF CULTURAL DIFFERENCE - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 73
About This Presentation
Title:

CHAPTER 2 MANY WORLDS: GEOGRAPHIES OF CULTURAL DIFFERENCE

Description:

How geographic differences are influenced by culture ... Doug Kershaw http://www.dailymotion.com/video/x2h2s5_doug-kershaw-mensonge ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:265
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 74
Provided by: steele8
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: CHAPTER 2 MANY WORLDS: GEOGRAPHIES OF CULTURAL DIFFERENCE


1
CHAPTER 2MANY WORLDSGEOGRAPHIES OF CULTURAL
DIFFERENCE
2
Introduction
  • How geographic differences are influenced by
    culture
  • World view affects perceptions and perceptions
    affect behavior
  • Foundational assumptions, attitudes, religion
    cosmology
  • Segregation in the United States
  • Pejorative and racist place-names

3
Introduction
  • How geographic differences develop
  • Cultural differences over short
    distancesexample of south Florida
  • Effects of globalization

4
Introduction
  • Cultural Geographies
  • No single way of seeing land and landscape
  • Places experienced differently between men and
    women
  • Relation to self and belonging

5
Many cultures
  • Increasing influence of globalization
  • First use of word culture in the fifteenth
    century
  • Term folk culture is invented relic
  • Examples
  • Subcultures age, economic, regional
  • Examples

6
Maintaining folk culture by immigrants in a new
land.
7
Ethnic minority drummers in China
8
Amish in Pennsylvania
9
 Many cultures
  • Classifying culture traits
  • Material culture
  • Examples
  • Nonmaterial culture (conscious subconscious)
  • Examples

10
Material Culture traits (objects) Sicilian
Wedding Cart
11
Many cultures
  • Classifying cultures
  • Folk culture (common characteristics)
  • Maintaining a way of life the way it was in the
    past
  • Rural people
  • Cohesive
  • Order maintained through religion or family
  • Folk geography
  • Examples

12
Many cultures
  • Classifying cultures
  • Popular culture
  • Mainly in urban areas
  • Access to media particularly the Internet
  • Cash economy
  • Tends to change respond to fads

13
Hip-Hop culture distinctive dress w/bling
14
Globalization of Hip-Hop Tokyo Urban Hip-Hop
15
Hip-Hop art mural on exhibition
16
Many cultures
  • Classifying cultures
  • Popular culture
  • Family structure weak
  • Examples of outside influences
  • Secular institutions of authority

17
Many cultures
  • Classifying cultures
  • Indigenous culture
  • Native
  • Convention of indigenous and tribal peoples
  • Live in colonized homelands
  • Examples in USA?

18
Regions of difference
  • A. Material folk culture regions
  • Vestiges of folk culture remain in the United
    States
  • House types
  • Example of African-American culture
  • Mormon

19
Florissant, MO French house type
20
Regions of difference
  • Material folk culture regions
  • Example Québec French folk region
  • Can be a force for dissolution or devolution in
    multi-national states such as Canada

21
Britain has granted Scotland its own parliament
and Wales may follow. Sometimes granting greater
autonomy can stave off a full scale revolt and
independence.
22
(No Transcript)
23
Regions of difference
  • Is popular culture placeless?
  • Greater mobility
  • Less attachment to place
  • Geographer Weissidentified 40 lifestyle
    clusters in the United States
  • Used zip codes
  • Subcultures

24
Regions of difference
  • Indigenous culture regions
  • Generally located in more remote areas
  • Example of Hill Tribes of South Asia
  • Persist in Central Americaexample Mayan
    culture region
  • Andean region of South America

25
Pamfillo, 18-yr-old Mayan young man in Belize
with Jesuit priest Fr. Rich Buhler
26
Regions of difference
  • Food and drink
  • Vary from place to place in the United States
    preferred types names of common types
  • The South
  • The North
  • Fast-food consumption spatial variations

27
Regions of difference
  • Popular music
  • Different styles of music reveal geographical
    patterns
  • Cajun Doug Kershaw http//www.dailymotion.com/vid
    eo/x2h2s5_doug-kershaw-mensonge-de-la-fouille_extr
    eme
  • Example of Elvis Presley

28
Regions of difference
  • Vernacular culture regions
  • Spatial perception of population
  • Wilbur Zelinsky's vernacular regions
  • Joseph Brownell sought to delimit Midwest
  • Often perpetuated by mass media

29
Wilbur Zelinsky's vernacular regions
30
Vernacular Architecture
  • It is a type of architecture which takes shape
    during time and is based on the culture, climate,
    and materials of it's region as well as on the
    needs of its inhabitants. It becomes a pattern
    (model) and is a specification (defining trait)
    of the region.

31
Diffusion and cultural difference
  • Agricultural fairs
  • Spread in a folk setting
  • Example of spread from Yankee folk region
  • Promoted by agricultural societies
  • Entertainment was addedracetrack and midway
  • Best prize in agricultural products was added

32
Diffusion and cultural difference
  • Blowguns diffusion or independent invention?
  • Found in both hemispheres
  • Probably first used on the island of Borneo
  • No written record of their beginning or use
  • Factors that can resolve the issue

33
Amazon Blowgun
34
Blowguns from Borneo
35
Diffusion and cultural difference
  • Diffusion in popular culture
  • Hierarchical diffusion and McDonald's
    restaurants
  • Reverse hierarchical diffusion and Wal-Mart
  • Role of modern transportation and
    communications networks

36
Diffusion and cultural difference
  • Advertising
  • Most effective in popular culture
  • Can determine success or failure of a product
  • Minimized importance of time-distance decay
  • Image of place

37
Diffusion and cultural difference
  • Communications barriers
  • Example of radio stations refusing to play punk
    rock
  • Other forms of music encountered similar problems
  • Live concerts helped spread the music
  • 1950s TV wouldnt show Elvis below the waist

38
Diffusion and cultural difference
  • Communications barriers
  • Government censorship
  • Example of Iran
  • Example of Taliban in Afghanistan
  • Not sustainable because of modern communications
  • 1989 Tiananmen Square
  • Newspapers can act as selective barriers

39
Tiananmen Square Demonstrations 1989
40
IV. Diffusion and cultural difference
  • Diffusion of the rodeo
  • Rooted in the ranching cultureneighborhood
    effect
  • Started in folk culture
  • Cowboys held contests at roundup time
  • Became formalized with prizes

41
Diffusion and cultural difference
  • Diffusion of the rodeo
  • Commercial rodeo
  • Example of Wild West show at Omaha
  • Commercial rodeos spread throughout the West and
    parts of Canada
  • Greatest acceptance in popular culture west of
    Mississippi and Missouri River

42
Ecologies of difference
  • Indigenous ecology
  • Most see indigenous cultures as knowledgeable
    about their environment
  • During European colonialization, indigenous
    peoples seen as destroyers of the land

43
Ecologies of difference
  • Indigenous ecology
  • Indigenous cultures often occupy territory
    viewed as critical to global diversity
  • Best known example?
  • Example of national parks and other protected
    areas

44
Ecologies of difference
  • Indigenous ecology
  • Indigenous cultures often occupy territory
    viewed as critical to global diversity
  • Tropical rainforests around the world
  • Importance of knowledge for management and land
    use practices

45
Ecologies of difference
  • Local knowledge
  • Indigenous technical knowledge (ITK)
  • May be superior to Western scientific knowledge
  • Allowed experimentation with new crops and
    agricultural techniques
  • Global economy applies heavy pressure to
    subsistence economies

46
Ecologies of difference
  • Global economy
  • Example of the Miskito Indians in Nicaragua
  • Subsistence economy
  • Outside demand for green turtles decimated
    population
  • Subsistence production in other areas suffered

47
Ecologies of difference
  • Global economy
  • Indigenous cultures sometimes must seek support
    from government agencies
  • Example of the Quichua populations in the
    Ecuadorian Andes
  • Must use outside ideas and technologies to
    promote their own culture

48
Ecologies of difference
  • Folk ecology
  • Have close ties to the land
  • When migrating seek lands similar to ones left
    behind
  • Example of Appalachian hill people

49
Ecologies of difference
  • Gendered ecology
  • Gender is an important variable in cultural
    ecology
  • Distinct roles in agroforestry
  • Example Diane Rocheleaus gender study
  • Environmental planning should address gendered
    differences

50
Ecologies of difference
  • Ecology of popular culture
  • People less tied to environment
  • People have enormous potential for producing
    ecological disasters

51
Ecologies of difference
  • Ecology of popular culture
  • Recreation
  • Increased in affluent regions
  • Recreational machines create air pollution
  • Soil erosion
  • Overtaxing of environments in national parks

52
Interaction and difference
  • Introduction
  • Core beliefs in folk culture limit degree of
    environmental disturbance
  • Popular culture has potential, through
    interaction, to cause massive restructuring

53
Interaction and difference
  • Introduction
  • Cultures are converging
  • Wilbur Zelinsky's given-name study

54
Interaction and difference
  • Mapping personal preference
  • Media often produces place images
  • Color our perception
  • May be inaccurate
  • Example of Hawaii
  • People have always formed images of faraway
    places

55
Landscapes of difference
  • Folk architecture
  • Very distinctive
  • Little change over time
  • Traditional, conservative, and functional
    structures

56
Landscapes of difference
  • Folk architecture
  • Harmony with the environment
  • Numerous characteristics help classify
    farmsteads and dwellings
  • Helps to establish cultural influences in a region

57
Landscapes of difference
  • Folk housing in Sub-Saharan Africa
  • Compound of buildingskraal
  • Use of local materials
  • Shapes differ

58
Landscapes of difference
  • Folk housing in Sub-Saharan Africa
  • Different cultures identified by change in house
    types
  • Example Ndebele culture region

59
Landscapes of difference
  • Folk housing in North America
  • Few are built today
  • Yankee folk houses
  • New England large house
  • Changed as Yankee folk migrated westward

60
Landscapes of difference
  • Folk housing in North America
  • Upland southern folk houses
  • Smallerbuilt of notched logs
  • Dogtrot house
  • French-derived Creole cottage

61
Dogtrot house
62
French Creole Cottage
63
Landscapes of difference
  • Folk housing in North America
  • Canada
  • Common types with main story atop cellar
  • Often built of stone
  • Description of the Ontario farmhouse

64
Landscapes of difference
  • Folk housing in North America
  • Interpretation of folk architecture is difficult
  • Independent invention versus diffusion
  • May be all that is left of the culture
  • Florissant
  • Houses
  • Street names
  • Town name
  • Park name

65
Landscapes of difference
  • Landscapes of popular culture
  • Continually changing
  • Example studies of commercial malls and strips
  • Five-stage model of strip evolution
  • From houses to commercial landscapes

66
Landscapes of difference
  • Landscapes of popular culture
  • Example West Edmonton Mall in province of
    Alberta, Canada
  • Largest indoor mall
  • Includes recreational areas
  • Described as a landscape of myth and
    elsewhereness

67
Landscapes of difference
  • Leisure landscapes
  • Designed for weekends and vacations
  • Amenity landscapesregions with attractive
    natural features
  • Example of Minnesota North Woods lake country
  • Relict buildings collected to form
    historylands

68
Landscapes of difference
  • Elitist landscapes
  • Clustering by people of similar wealth,
    education, and taste
  • The French Riviera
  • Building codes
  • Normal activities gone

69
The Boulders in Carefree, AZ
70
Landscapes of difference
  • Elitist landscapes
  • Gentleman farms in America
  • An avocation for affluent city people
  • Examples in the eastern United States
  • High concentration in the Kentucky Bluegrass
    Basin

71
Landscapes of difference
  • The American scene
  • Preeminence of function over form
  • Fondness for massive structures

72
Landscapes of difference
  • The American scene
  • Americans regard cultural landscape as
    unfinished
  • Collections of heterogeneous buildings
  • Eye-catching structures

73
Conclusion
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com