Culture Regions – Flashcards
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Subculture
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-A cultural subgroup differentiated by status, ethnic background, resident, religion, or other factors that functionally unify the group and act collectively on each member
-A set of people with behaviors and or beliefs that set them apart from the larger culture to which they belong
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Counterculture
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If the subculture displays a systematic opposition to the dominant culture, and then it may be described as counterculture (i.e. the Amish, hippies, and gypsies)
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Cultural Hearth
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A site of innovation from which basic ideas, materials, and technology diffuse to many cultures
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Main traditional culture hearths
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1. Nile River Valley
2. Indus Valley
3. Wei-Huang Valley
4. Ganges Valley
5. Mesopotamia
6. Mesoamerica
7. West Africa
8. Andean Americas
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Cultural Realms
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Regions on a larger, more global scale
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Difference between culture regions and culture realms
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Scale
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Cultural Region
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Culture region is a grouping of like places or the functional union of places to forma a spatial unit
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Cultural Regions are formed when groups of people...
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-Share some cultural traits in common
-Live in close proximity to each other
-Form a landscape that reflects their culture
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Culture regions are the outcome of....
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human and natural relationships
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Cultural geographers tend to use regions as..
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-As a way to classify data (means to establish "order" on diverse cultural phenomena)
-As a tool (Structures the study areas, and borders are needed to do research)
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2 ways to categorize culture regions
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1. What it is (characteristics such as culture trait)
2. How it works (functions)
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3 Types of Culture Regions
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Formal, Functional, and Vernacular/Perceptual
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Formal Culture Region
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-An area inhabited by people who have one or more cultural traits in common
-Characterized by uniformity in cultural traits that unite a group, but also separate this group from another group
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Common formal regions are based on
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-Language
-Religion
-Ethnicity
-Or a combination of these culture traits
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Functional Culture Region
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-Differentiated by what occurs within the region NOT by homogeneity of a physical or cultural characteristic
-Arranged around a node or focal point
-Can range in scale form a single home to the entire world
-They may or may not show similarities of natural features
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A functional region is organized to function
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politically, socially, and economically
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Norton Definition of Functional Region
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resulting from "Human connectedness rather than human relatedness"
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Nodes Definition
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Areas where functions are coordinated and directed
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Examples of functional Culture Regions
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-City or State
-Police precinct
-Church Parish
-Trade Area
-Family Farm
-School District
-Newspaper Circulation zone
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Functional Culture Region Boundaries
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-These boundaries are often political (state) borders
-They don't always coincide with formal culture regions
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Cognitive (Mental) Maps
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Are subjective environments, based on everyday perceptions of the relative locations and attributes experienced by a person in his/her everyday spatial life
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Vernacular Culture Regions
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-May have a "nickname" based on people's sense of belonging or regional self consciousness
-Has an element of popular folk culture
-Represented by the "mental or cognitive maps" of people in the region
-May overlap with formal regions
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Where does Norton say Vernacular regions are strong and weaker
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Stronger in the southeast than in the northeast
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Vernacular vs. Formal Region
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Differs from formal regions because it frequently doesn't display the cultural homogeneity that characterizes formal region
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Vernacular vs. Functional Region
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Differs from functional regions because it often lacks the organization and interaction necessary for functional regions
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Why are vernacular regions powerful
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Because these regions are based on perception, vernacular regions are often the most powerful of the three types of regions
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Why are cultural geographers interested in vernacular regions?
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-These regions are based on the spatial perceptions of the average person
-Usually have a regional identity by bother those on the inside and those on the outside of the region and usually have meaning attached to them
-Much of the data is collected from individuals because the regions are based on what people think about their regions