Please enable JavaScript.
Coggle requires JavaScript to display documents.
Key concepts of cultural transmission (Culture (How are norms and values…
Key concepts of cultural transmission
Culture
Cultural relativity
Cultural universal
Norms
Values
Morals
Roles
Role models
Status
Identity
How are norms and values transmitted?
School
Family
Primary socialisation
Peer group
Media
Nature versus nurture
Nature
Behaviour is innate
Instincts
Genetic make up
Twins have similar characteristics
Biologists
Animal behaviour
Inheritance
Testosterone and aggression
Nurture
Agencies of socialisation
Feral children
Cultural diversity
Changes over time and across cultures
Sociologists
Not all women have maternal instinct
Suicide
Primary socialisation
Norms of their culture
Manipulation
Canalisation
Toys and games
Positive and negative sanctions
Language
Role modelling
Imitation
Secondary socialisation
Media
Powerful advertising
Body image
'Mums go to Iceland' stereotypical
Childs Play and Bulger murder
Stereotypes of minority groups
Religion
Moral code
Reinforcing norms
Less influence today
Feral children
Genie
Oxana Malaya
difficult to 'fit in' communication, walking mixing
Not taught norms and values
Supports nurture theory
Do not often manage to grasp language
Behave like animals if socialised with them
Gender socialisation
Role models/ imitation
Language
Clothing
Canalisation
Toys and books
Through agencies of socialisation
School
Uniforms
Subject choice
Gender regimes
Peer group
Peer pressure
Fitting in
Informal sanctions
Mass media
Stereotypes
Role modelling
Children's TV
Workplace
Sanctions and rewards
Gendered jobs
Glass ceiling
Religion
Dress codes
Moral codes
Identity
Class
Ethnicity
National
Social control
Informal
Family
Friends
Community
Schools
Formal
Police
Government
Courts
Prisons and other sanctions