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AP Human Geography-Unit 3 (Culture & Language) Flashcards

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8009019730culturea group of belief systems, norms, and values practiced by a people EX) Makan American Indians who hunt whales0
8009019731folk/local culturehow a group of people in a place that see themselves and share customs/traits. OR a small culture that incorporates a homogeneous population that is typically rural and cohesive in cultural traits.1
8009019732folklorethe traditional beliefs, customs, and stories of a community, passed through generations by word of mouth2
8009019733popular culturelarge culture that incorporates heterogeneous populations, is typically urban, and experiences quick changing traits.3
8009019734material culturethe things a group of people construct, including homes, clothing, sports, dance, and foods.4
8009019735built environmenta material, spatial, and cultural product of human labor5
8009019736nonmaterial culturebeliefs, practices, aesthetics, and values of a group of people. EX) Hutterites value marrying within their religion6
8009019737cultural appropriationthe process by which other cultures adopt customs and knowledge and use them for their own benefit EX) People not of the culture getting henna tattoos7
8009019738neolocalismseeking out the regional culture and reinvigorating it in the response to uncertainty of the modern world. EX) In Lindsborg, Kansas, they proclaim their town Little Sweden, USA8
8009019739ethnic neighborhoodstight nit neighborhoods within a major city where local cultures have built a world apart to practice their customs EX) Hasidic Jews in Brooklyn, NY9
8009019740commodificationthe process through which something (a name, good, idea, or person) becomes an object that can be bought and sold in the world market, when it previously wasn't regarded so.10
8009019741Distance DecayHow quickly innovations diffuse and refers to how interlinked two places are through transportation and communication11
8009019742time-space compressionexplains how quickly innovations diffuse and refers to how interlinked two places are through transportation and communication12
8009019743reterritorializationa term referring to a process in which people start to produce an aspect of popular culture themselves, doing so in the context of their local culture and place, making it their own. EX) Hip hop spread from NY and LA to major cities in Europe13
8009019744hierarchical diffusioncan occur through a hierarchy of places. The hearth is the point of origin. Large cities to smaller ones (trickles down)14
8009019745contagious diffusionidea spreads from person to person EX) word of mouth15
8009019746stimulus diffusionwhen an exact idea can't be adopted in a certain area (due to cultural barriers, etc.) leading to altering of the idea. It is a stimulus for newer ideas. EX) non-meat burgers at McDonald's in India16
8009019747relocation diffusionwhen individuals who have adopted the idea move to new places and disseminate it. The hearth loses strength in the idea and the places the individuals move to gain strength in it. EX) Buddhism started in India, but now has more followers in Thailand, Cambodia, and Myanmar17
8009019748assimilationthe process of making indigenous people adopt the dominant culture and abandon their own culture. EX) US wanted to assimilate Native Americans in the 18 and 1900s.18
8009019749acculturationthe process of making indigenous people adopt the dominant culture and abandon their own culture EX) People learning English in the US19
8009019750cultural landscapethe visible imprint of human activity on the landscape20
8009019751sequent occupanceproposed by Derwent Whittlesay. Cultural imprints made over top of each other, each affect the next, have a lasting imprint EX) In N Africa, Islamic mosques have Roman influences21
8009019752placelessnesscoined by George Edward Relph to describe the loss of uniqueness in place in the cultural landscape to the point that one place looks like the next EX) subburbs22
8009019753global-local continuumthe idea that cultural borrowing and mixing is happening all over the world. Emphasizes that what happens on one scale is not independent of what happens on another. EX) Venetian hotel is Las Vegas, Nevada23
8009019754glocalizationpeople in a local place mediate and alter regional, national, and global processes. Causes global-local continuum24
8009019755adaptive strategytechnology, ecology, demography, and economies that define human behavior EX) farming tech, air conditioning25
8009019756folk-housing regionsFred Kniffen researched house types and their diffusion in North America and found that 3 regions have these houses: (1)New England, (2) Mid-Atlantic, and (3) Lower Chesapeake Bay. The diffusion streams created the regions. EX) (1) Saltbox, two-chimney, Cape Cod, Front Wing, and Gable. (2) I-house, Tidewater. (3) Shotgun26
8009019757Anglo-American landscapethe township and range patterns established by early settlers in which there were long rows of roads in square or rectangular patterns EX) prevails over US Midwest27
8009019758traditional architecturebuildings use building materials available and reflect social/environmental customs of the people EX) log cabins28
8009019759folk songstraditionally sung by the common people of a region. forms part of their culture EX) May tell stories29
8009019760folk foodtraditional food EX) barbecue in South30
8009019761gendersocial differences between men and women31
8009019762identifyhow people view themselves at different scales EX) gender identity32
8009019763identifying againstdefine the "other", then define ourselves in opposing terms. One of the most powerful ways to construct an identity. EX) Europeans called the Middle East and Asia the "Orient", and called it a mystical place. They also called Africans and Americans "savage". The Europeans said they weren't either of these things, so they were therefore "civil"33
8009019764racethe product of ways of viewing minor genetic differences around the world. Excellent example fo how geographic context shapes identity.34
8009019765racismsense of superiority attached to race35
8009019766residential segregationto degree which two or more groups live separately from one another, in different parts of the urban environment. 5 statistical measurements of segregation: evenness, exposure, concentrated, centralized, and clustered. EX) In 2010 the most residentially segregated metropolitan area in the IS was Milwaukee, Wisconsin36
8009019767sense of placemade by the emotions and memories attached to a place. Changes as we and the place change.37
8009019768ethnicityan identity based on being bounded or related to a certain place over time EX) Latino, Hispanic38
8009019769ghettoa part of a city, especially a slum area, occupied by a minority group or groups EX) ghettos in NY39
8009019770dowry deathswhen a bride is killed because her father was unable to fulfill a marriage agreement EX) often occurs in India40
8009019771infantcidekilling of infants EX) girls are killed in India because they are seen as a burden due to dowries41
8009019772barrioAn urban area in a Spanish speaking country42
8009019773languagea set of sounds and symbols that is used for communication43
8009019774standard languagea published, widely distributed, and purposefully taught language that most technologically advanced societies have.EX) Ireland promotes the use of Celtic by requiring all government workers to pass Irish-language exam44
8009019775dialecta variant of a standard language along regional or ethnic liens. Made of differences in: vocab, syntax, pronunciation, cadence, and pace. EX) Southern-English45
8009019776isoglossa geographic boundary in which a particular linguistic feature occurs. Rarely a simple line. EX) the lines of which American dialects are fuzzy46
8009019777mutual intelligibilitymeans that two people can understand each other while speaking. Has been rejected as strongly as environmental determinism. EX) mostly with two dialects of one language, but Danish and Norwegian speakers can understand each other while Mandarin and Cantonese canoot47
8009019778dialect chainsdialects nearest to each other will be most similar. As you go farther apart, dialects become less intelligible.48
8009019779language familyway of classifying languages at the global scale. The languages have shared by fairly distant origins. Broken into sub-families. EX) Indo-European language family includes Italian, Spanish, and French49
8009019780language subfamilydivisions within a language family, the commonalities are more definite and origins more recent. Consists of individual languages with smaller spatial extents and dialects with even smaller spatial extents EX) Indo-European is broken into sub-families of Romance, Germanic, and Slavic50
8009019781language groupsset of languages with a relatively recent common origin and many similar characteristics EX) Germanic, Romance, Slavic51
8009019782Indo-European languagea language from the Indo-European family. Spoken by half of the world's people, and includes among others, the Germanic, Romance, and Slavic subfamilies52
8009019783lingua francaa language used among speakers of different languages for the purposes of trade and commerce. Can be one language or a mixture.53
8009019784pidgin languagewhen people speaking 2 or more languages are in contact and they combine parts of their languages in a simplified structure and vocabulary EX) the first widely known pidgin language is the Frankish language, a mix of Frank tongue with Italian, Greek, Spanish, and Arabic for trade on eastern Mediterranean with Southern Franks.54
8009019785trade languagea simplified language that develops as a means of communication between two or more groups that do not have a language in common. EX) in SE Asia, Bazaar Malay is Myanmar (Burma) to Indonesia and from the Philippines to Malaysia. It is a lingua franca and simplified form of Chinese55
8009019786creole languagea pidgin language that has developed a more complex structure and a vocabulary and has become a native language of a group of people EX) Swahili56
8009019787monolingual statescountries in which everyone speaks the same language EX) Japan, Uruguay, Iceland, Denmark, Portugal, Poland, and Lesotho57
8009019788multilingual statescountries in which more than one language is in use EX) US58
8009019789official languageadopted by countries with linguistic fragmentation to tie the people together. Or in colonies, one that ties them to their colonizer.59
8009019790global languagea common language of trade and commerce used around the world. EX) like lingua franca60
8009019791linguistic diversitythere are more than 7000 languages spoken today that are created by economic, technological, and ideological globalization. EX) more than 1500 languages are spoken in Sub-Saharan Africa61
8009019792toponymsplace names. often refer to social progress in the area. May impact how people view the lace. Dominated by 10 themes: descriptive, commendatory, possession, commemorative, associative, incidents, possession, folk, manufactured, mistakes, shift. EX) "Mount Prospect" and "Mount Misery"62
8009246943taboosbehaviors heavily discouraged by a culture63
8009252085culture realmslarge geographic regions where cultures within the larger realm have some similar common traits64
8009264972nativistanti-immigrant attitudes within a cultural majority65
8009273030linguistscientists who study languages66
8009276228language treethe relationship among language families are often shown to that of a tree67

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