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Human Geography By James Rubenstein

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Human Geography By James Rubenstein Chapter 4 Key Issue 2 Why is Folk Culture Clustered? Isolation Promotes Cultural Diversity Folk customs observed at a point in ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Human Geography By James Rubenstein


1
Human Geography By James Rubenstein
  • Chapter 4
  • Key Issue 2
  • Why is Folk Culture Clustered?

2
Isolation Promotes Cultural Diversity
  • Folk customs observed at a point in time vary
    widely from one place to another, even among
    nearby places.

3
Examples of Distinctive Folk Art in the Himalaya
  • Tibetan Buddhists
  • Hindus in the south
  • Muslims in the west
  • Southeast Asian animists in the east

4
Cultural Regions in the Himalaya
5
Tibetan Buddhists in northern region
  • Idealized divine figures, such as monks and
    saints.
  • Some of the figures are depicted as bizarre or
    terrifying, perhaps reflecting in the
    inhospitable environment.

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Hindus in the southern region
  • Scenes from everyday life and familiar local
    scenes.
  • Paintings sometimes portray a deity in a domestic
    scene and frequently represent the regions
    violent and extreme climatic conditions.

9
Snakes have long been popular subjects of Hindu
art.
10
Alam Shah closing the dam at Shishan Pass
11
Muslims in the West
  • Show the regions beautiful plants and flowers,
    because Muslim faith prohibits displaying animate
    objects in art.
  • In contrast to the Buddhist and Hindu, Muslims do
    not depict harsh climatic conditions.

12
Abstract, geometric forms that translated into
the architecture of mosques.
13
Geometric forms in the ceiling of a Mosque
14
Sistine Chapelin the Vatican City(Christian Art)
15
Animist from Myanmar and Southeast Asia.
  • Create symbols and designs that derive from their
    religion rather than from local environment.

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17
The distribution of artistic subjects in the
Himalayas shows how folk customs are influenced
by cultural institutions like religion and by
environmental processes such as climate,
landforms, and vegetation.
18
Influence of the Physical Environment
  • Examples exist of peoples who live in similar
    environments but adopt different social customs.
  • Examples exist of peoples who live under
    different environmental conditions but adopt
    similar social customs.

19
Examples of Environment Influence on Clothing
  • Residents of arctic climates wear fur lined
    boots to protect from the cold.
  • People in the tropics may wear no shoes, because
    heavy rainfall discourages their use.
  • Dutch farmers wear wooden shoes because they are
    waterproof.

20
Two necessities of daily life
  • food and shelter
  • demonstrate the influence of
  • cultural values and the environment
  • on development of unique folk culture.

21
Distinctive Food Preferences
  • Geographer Vidal de la Blache regards clothing
    and weapons more subject to modification than the
    dietary regime.

22
Soybeans as Examples of Food Preference Adaptation
  • Excellent source of protein.
  • Widely grown in Asia.
  • Toxic and indigestible in the raw state.
  • Edible if cooked thoroughly.
  • Fuel for cooking is scarce.

23
Soybeans as a Food Source
  • Bean Sprouts (germinated seeds).
  • Soy Sauce (fermented soybeans)
  • Bean Curd (steamed soybeans).

24
In Europe
  • Preference for quick-frying foods in Italy
    resulted in part from fuel shortages.
  • Abundant wood supply in Northern Europe
    encouraged the slow stewing and roasting of foods
    over fires, which also provided heat for homes.

25
Food Diversity
26
  • Although food customs are inevitably affected by
    the availability of products, food consumed in
    neighboring cultural groups often reflect
    distinctive traditions.

27
Ethnicity of Transylvania Before WWII
  • 4 million Hungarians
  • 4 million Romanians
  • 500,000-600,000 Saxons
  • 50,000-75,000 Jews
  • 20,000-25,000 Armenians
  • Thousands of Szeklers

28
Soups Consumed by the Poor In Transylvania
  • Romanians ate sour bran soups from cracked
    wheat, corn, brown bread, and cherry tree twigs.
  • Saxons simmered fatty pork in water, added
    sauerkraut or vinegar, and used fruits.
  • Jews preferred soups of beets and sorrel.

29
Soups Consumed by the Poor In Transylvania
continued
  • Armenians made soup out of curdled milk and
    ground vegetables.
  • Hungarians added smoked bacon and thickened the
    soup with flour and onion fried in lard.
  • Szeklers substituted smoked goose, or other
    poultry for the bacon of the Hungarian recipes.

30
Food Attractions and Taboos
  • People may desire or avoid certain foods in
    response to perceived beneficial or harmful
    natural traits.

31
Taboo
  • A restriction on behavior imposed by social
    custom.

32
Examples of Food Taboos
  • Abipone Indians of Paraguay eat jaguars and
    bulls to make themselves strong.
  • The mandrake was thought to enhance lovemaking
    in Mediterranean climates.
  • The Ainus in Japan thought that otters would
    make one forgetful.
  • Europeans first thought potatoes caused typhoid
    and tuberculosis.

33
Environmental factors to the Prohibition against
Hogs
  • To the Hebrew, pigs were unsuited to pastoral
    nomadism, and the meat spoiled quickly in hot
    climates.
  • To Muslims in Arabia, pigs competed with humans
    for food and water, without offering compensating
    benefits like wool, or milk.

34
Annual Hog Production
35
Environmental Reasons for the Hindus prohibition
against Beef
  • A large supply of oxen are needed to pull plows.
  • Religious sanctions have insured an increasing
    population of cattle.

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Insects as Food
  • Americans avoid eating insects, despite their
    nutritional value.
  • In Thailand, giant water bugs are deep fried as
    snack foods.
  • Americans consume insects in canned mushrooms
    and tomato paste.

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40
Trays of tasty insects at the night market, Hat
Yai, Thailand
41
Folk Housing
  • The house is a product of both cultural tradition
    and natural conditions.
  • A reflection of cultural heritage, current
    fashion, functional needs, and the impact of the
    environment.

42
Distinctive Building Materials
  • Wood when forest are available.
  • Bricks of dried wet mud, when trees are in
    limited supply.
  • Also used are resources such as stone, grass,
    sod, and skins.
  • Drywall for interior wall is used to save money.

43
Distinctive House Form
  • Form often reflect religious values.
  • - East wall is sacred in Fiji
  • - Northwest wall in China is sacred
  • - Walls and corners are also noted in
    parts of the Middle East, India, and
    Africa

44
Houses in Madagascar
  • The main door is in the west (the most important
    direction).
  • Northeast corner is most sacred.
  • North wall for honoring ancestors.
  • Important guest enter room from the north and
    sit against the north wall.
  • The bed is placed against the east wall, with
    the head facing north.

45
  • In the south-central part of Java, the front door
    always faces south, in the direction of the South
    Sea Goddess, who holds the key to Earth.

46
Houses in Laos
  • Beds are arranged perpendicular to the center
    ridgepole of the house.
  • People sleep with their heads opposite their
    neighbors.
  • A child, living next door, sleeps with his or
    her head toward the parents feet.

47
Housing in Laos
48
Houses of the Yuan and Shan of Thailand
  • All sleep with their heads toward the east.
  • Staircases must not face west (the direction of
    death and evil sprits).

49
Housing in Thailand
50
Housing and Environment
  • Pitched roofs in wet and snowy climates to
    facilitate runoff.
  • Windows face south in temperate climates to take
    advantage of the Suns heat and light.
  • In hot climates, window opening may be small to
    protect the interior from the heat of the sun.

51
Housing In China
  • Kashgar have second floor open-air patios.
  • Small open courts in Turpan.
  • Large private courtyards in Yinchuan.
  • Sloped roofs in Dunhuang.

52
House types of Western China
53
U.S. Folk House Forms
  • Pioneer homes reflected the style in the place
    from which they migrated.
  • Homes built in the past half century display
    popular culture influences.

54
Major hearths of folk house forms in U.S.
  • New England
  • Middle Atlantic
  • Lower Chesapeake

55
Source areas of U.S. house types
56
Major house types in New England
  • Saltbox
  • Two-Chimney
  • Cape Cod
  • Front Gable Wing

57
Diffusion of New England house types
58
Major house types in Middle Atlantic
  • The I house resembled the letter I, because
    it was one room deep, two rooms wide, two stories
    high.

59
Lower Chesapeake or Tidewater
  • One story, with steep roof, chimneys at either
    end, and typically one room deep.
  • In wet areas house was raised on piers or brick
    foundations.

60
Todays Houses in U.S.
  • Distinctions are relatively difficult to observe.
  • Most houses are mass produced by construction
    company.
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