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Cultural Conformity and Adaptation Social Change

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Cultural Conformity and Adaptation Social Change Chapter 3, section 3 Pgs. 54-61 – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Cultural Conformity and Adaptation Social Change


1
Cultural Conformity and AdaptationSocial Change
  • Chapter 3, section 3
  • Pgs. 54-61

2
Social Change
  • All cultures change over time.
  • The rate of change can also accelerate because
    each change brings about other changes.
  • There are many factors that stimulate change
    values, beliefs, technology, population,
    diffusion, the physical environment, and wars and
    conquests.

3
Values and Beliefs
  • Society is a system of interrelated parts so a
    change in one aspect of society produces changes
    throughout the system.
  • Ideology is a system of beliefs or ideas that
    justifies the social, moral, religious,
    political, or economic interests held by a group
    or by society.

4
Values and Beliefs
  • Ideologies often are spread through social
    movements.
  • A social movement is a long term conscious effort
    to promote or prevent social change.
  • Social Movements usually involve large numbers of
    people
  • Social Movements include
  • Prohibition movement
  • Womens rights
  • Peace movement
  • Civil rights movement

5
Civil Rights Movement
  • As recently as the 1950s African Americans were
    forced to live as second-class citizens,
    particularly through the south.
  • The Voting Rights Act of 1965 outlawed various
    methods that had been used to deny African
    Americans the vote.

6
Technology
  • Social Change also occurs when people find new
    ways to manipulate their environment.
  • Technology the knowledge and tools that people
    use to manipulate their environment.
  • Two ways that new Technologies arise are through
  • Discovery
  • Invention
  • What is the difference?

7
Technology
  • Discovery
  • Discovery occurs when people recognize new uses
    for existing elements in the world or begin to
    understand them in new ways.
  • Chewing gum, oil shale, and atomic fusion.
  • Invention
  • Invention occurs when people use existing
    knowledge to create something that did not
    previously exist.
  • Material invention computers small enough to
    hold in your hand
  • Non-material invention new hobbies

8
Population
  • A change in the size of the population may bring
    about change in the culture.
  • The arrival of new groups of people with their
    own unique cultural traits and value has
    influenced American culture.
  • Social and cultural change can result from
    changes in the average age of the population.
    When fewer people are having babies, there is
    less need for schools, recreation centers, etc.
    More need for specialized services geared toward
    elderly people.

9
Diffusion
  • People often borrow ideas, beliefs, and material
    objects from other societies.
  • Diffusion the process of spreading culture
    traits from one society to another.
  • The more contact a society has with other
    societies, the more cultures traits it will
    borrow.
  • Some culture traits spread more rapidly then
    others.
  • Societies adopt material cultures and technology
    more freely then ideas and beliefs.
  • Tools vs. religion

10
Diffusion
  • Sociologists refer to this process of adapting
    borrowed cultural traits as reformulation.
  • Diffusion is a two way process.
  • As a result of contact with other cultures
  • Americans eat foods such as pasta from Italy or
    sushi from Japan.
  • Also American movies, music, cars, and soft
    drinks can be found in countries throughout the
    world.

11
The Physical Environment
  • The introduction of new foods or the scarcity of
    a familiar food can bring about cultural change.
  • A change in the supply of natural resources may
    bring about cultural change.
  • 1970s high gas prices
  • Extreme prices
  • Long gas lines
  • American sought alternative sources of energy and
    develop smaller, more efficient cares.
  • This movement slowed in the 1980s because fuel
    shortages eased.
  • The production of large and less efficient cars
    increased again.

12
Wars and Conquest
  • Wars and conquests are not as common as other
    social changes.
  • They do bring about the biggest changes though in
    the least amount of time.
  • Wars and Conquests cause
  • Loss of life
  • Destruction of property that need to be rebuilt
  • Changes in the economy as industry focused on war
    production.
  • Changes in government such as ruler, laws, and
    new political policies and rights.

13
Resistance to Change
  • Cultural change rarely occurs without some
    opposition.
  • For each change you have several groups
  • Those who strongly oppose it, those who accept it
    after time and people who will never accept it,
    but learn to adapt to it.
  • Ethnocentrism, cultural lag, and vested interest
    are among the reasons that people resist change.

14
Ethnocentrism
  • Change that comes from outside a society is meant
    with particular resistance.
  • People tend to believe that their own ideas and
    ways of doing things are best.
  • Extreme ethnocentrism can make cultural borrowing
    difficult or even impossible.

15
Cultural Lag
  • Some traits change rapidly and the transformation
    of others may take considerable time this is
    known as cultural lag.
  • Can you think of examples?
  • Computers and the internet have led to a cultural
    lag. These two offer education opportunities,
    but because of cost and other factors some
    districts have yet to put this technology to
    effective use in the classroom.

16
Vested Interest
  • A person who is satisfied with the way things are
    now is likely to resist change.
  • They will resist any change that threatens their
    security or standard of living.
  • In other words they have a vested interest.
  • In 1992 the Energy Policy Act was passed by
    George Bush to stop rising gas prices. But the
    new policy did not focus enough on conservation
    or on the use of renewable fuels.

17
Vested Interest
  • One reason it was difficult to implement energy
    policies to permanently solve the energy problems
    was that many people in the oil industry
    benefited from the high prices of oil products.
  • To protect their vested interest oil companies
    and workers in the industry have lobbied the
    government to protect their interest.
  • Ex. Campaign contributions
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