CCS#11: Culture, Subculture, Counterculture

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Across
  1. 4. These cultural patterns set apart a segment of a society’s population.
  2. 8. This kind of culture rejects the ideas, symbols, or values of most people in their society in an attempt to change how society operates.
  3. 9. This viewpoint indicates that the contributions of nonwhite people are largely overlooked or denied in public education and throughout culture in the US (and other places), and that cultures of majority nonwhite countries are often looked down on or ignored.
  4. 11. In this sociological perspective, cultures provide order and cohesiveness to a society.
  5. 12. These cultural patterns are broadly in line with a society’s cultural ideals and values
  6. 13. Cultural patterns that are less accessible and distinguish a society’s elite.
  7. 14. The practice of judging one culture by the standards of another
  8. 15. This viewpoint highlights the lives of Africans and their descendants around the world.
Down
  1. 1. Also known as “popular” culture, these cultural behaviors and ideas are widely accessible and valued throughout a society.
  2. 2. This indicates that some aspects of culture change while others remain the same even when there is no other reason to continue doing things in the same way. Similarly, it indicates that new inventions create the need to form new cultures and norms.
  3. 3. In this sociological perspective, culture can be used as a basis to reinforce the power of some groups over other groups in society, marginalizing those with less power.
  4. 5. In this sociological perspective, shared culture creates shared realities that we collectively create.
  5. 6. This perspective recognizes cultural diversity and advocates for the equal standing of a wide array of cultural traditions
  6. 7. This idea indicates that many cultures come together to form a single combined culture.
  7. 10. This indicates that cultural ideas and practices move from one society to another.