Culture (ASE 4e)

12345678910111213141516171819202122232425262728293031323334
Across
  1. 3. Rules for group behaviors, informed by values, specifying appropriate and inappropriate activities.
  2. 6. International production, distribution, and marketing system of corporations, laborers, and consumers.
  3. 7. Members of a dominant culture adopting cultural goods (e.g., ideas, symbols, skills, cultural expressions, intellectual property) of other cultural groups for profit.
  4. 8. Ritzer’s term for the increased rationalization and globalization of culture.
  5. 11. Imposition of a dominant group’s material and symbolic culture onto another group.
  6. 13. Non-economic cultural resources (e.g., knowledge, skills, behaviors) attuned to a particular sphere of social life.
  7. 16. Using a stash of beliefs, values, and attitudes that we learn how to deploy based upon the situation at hand.
  8. 17. A learned disposition, based within the particular social world a person inhabits.
  9. 18. A group that uses alternative symbolic and material cultural goods to distinguish themselves from the wider society.
  10. 20. Physical goods, not necessarily essentials, often placed within an economic system.
  11. 21. Integration of political and economic systems; has brought about intercultural communication and an exchange of ideas and values.
  12. 23. Collection of people who share similar characteristics that a community has given a certain level of prestige.
  13. 26. Adopting a set of informal rules and manners attuned to a particular setting.
  14. 30. Aspect of culture that includes beliefs, values, norms, and language.
  15. 31. Moral beliefs
  16. 33. Corporations supporting cultural institutions in order to improve their reputation.
  17. 34. Creating and maintaining symbolic boundaries to limit group membership and access to resources.
Down
  1. 1. A set of images and words that represent a particular culture.
  2. 2. A system of organizations that produce and distribute cultural goods (e.g., music, food, art).
  3. 4. Gaining prestige by exhibiting valuable cultural goods.
  4. 5. Weber’s term for capitalism’s trend toward increased calculability, efficiency, predictability, and control.
  5. 9. Everything we make and consume, including ideas, attitudes, traditions, and practices.
  6. 10. Cultural goods made for and enjoyed by elite groups.
  7. 12. Routinized and highly important group activities.
  8. 14. Efforts to raise awareness around issues of hegemony through informal and often illegal guerilla marketing campaigns.
  9. 15. People who differentiate themselves by knowing a lot about many different cultural fields.
  10. 19. Investing in cultural institutions focused on Indigenous peoples in order to appear supportive of indigenous groups.
  11. 22. A very strongly held and enforced social norm.
  12. 24. The acquisition of smaller corporations by larger ones.
  13. 25. Heavily produced and commercialized goods made for and consumed by a large audience.
  14. 27. Conceptual ways people separate each other into groups (e.g., traditions, styles, tastes, classifications).
  15. 28. Material or immaterial objects that groups affix meaning to
  16. 29. The social designation of honor, either positive or negative.
  17. 32. A context of social relations (e.g., a profession, a community) where a particular kind of cultural capital is exchanged.