1. When we need a term for that larger whole which is the common property of all group of men and which distinctively sets off making from all other animal, there is no question; we call it culture.
Hymes, Dell. Language of Culture and Society: A reader in linguistics and anthropology. 1964. Harper and Row Publisher, New York.
2. The art of customs, beliefs and all the other products of human thought made by people at particular time.
Procter, Paul. Longman English Dictionary.1978.The Pitman Press, London.
3. Culture, in general sense, it is the tradition of a social heritage of man; in its specific sense, it is the tradition of a particular human group, a way of living learned from and shared by the member of that group.
Malefijt, Annemarie De Waal. Religion and Culture: An Introduction To Anthropology of Religion. 1968. Collier-Macmillan Ltd, New York.
4. Anthropology was seen as the comparative study of cultures: the habits, customs and also the material technology employed within different societies.
Polity Press. The Polity Readers in Cultural Theory.1994. Polity Press, London.
5. Culture is a vital and dynamics force that is always in the process of development.
Swartz, Mark J and David K Jordan. Culture: The Anthropological Perspective. 1980. John Wiley and Sons, Inc, New York
No Comments Yet
No comments yet.
Comments RSS TrackBack Identifier URI
Leave a comment
