WMNS 1103 Lecture Notes - Lecture 4: Social Capital, Cultural Capital

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Culture is more than artifacts, rituals, and traditions. It is becoming increasingly indisputable that culture and cultural differences, including language, play a discernible role in power relationships and how children identify with their schools. Defining culture: culture needs to be thought of in an unsentimental way. Cultures do not exist in a vacuum, but rather are situated in particular historical, social, political, and economic conditions, and therefore they are influenced by issues of power. This stance is disingenuous at best because it fails to observe that. Whites as a group participate disproportionately in a culture of power based simply on their race. Culture is dynamic: cultures are always changing as a result of political, social, and other modifications in the immediate environment. Cultures are always hybrids, and people select and reject particular elements of culture as suitable or not for particular contexts.

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