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Culture
inhabit > colonus > colony
cultivate
protect
honour…
Culture
- inhabit > colonus > colony
- cultivate
- protect
- honour with worship
cultura animi
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A process of human development, alongside with the original meaning of husbandry.
A degree of habituation to the metaphor, which made the sense of human tending direct.
An extension of particular processes to a general process, which the word could abstractly carry.
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Categories of usage:
(ii) the independent noun, whether used generally or specifically, which indicates a particular way of life, whether of a people, a period, a group, or humanity in general
(iii) the independent and abstract noun which describes the works and practices of intellectual and specifically artistic activity
(i) the independent and abstract noun which describes a general process of intellectual, spiritual and aesthetic development
Complexity in the relation between general human development and a particular way of life and between both and the works and practices of art and intelligence.
Subordinate to the senses of art and learning, or of a general process of human development in Italian or French, but with anthropological common use in German, Scandinavian and Slavonic.
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Culture or a culture is primarily to material production, while in history and cultural studies the reference is primarily to signifying or symbolic systems.
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Hostility
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American phrase culture-vulture> all the hostility and the anti-German feeling: involving claims to superior knowledge (intellectual), refinement (culchah) and high art (culture) and popular art and entertainment.
Social and anthropological use of culture and cultural and formations as sub-culture diminished the hostility.
The recent culturalism indicates a methodological contrast with structuralism in social analysis, retains many of the difficulties, and does not always bypass the hostility.