It is the process by which an individual acquires the mental
representations (beliefs, knowledge, and so forth) and patterns of behavior
required to function as a member of a culture. It can be seen as the
counterpart, at the level of culture, of the process of socialization.
Enculturation is largely seen, for native members of a culture, as taking place
in childhood as part of the process of child training and education. Initiation
rites and other forms of training later in life can also be seen to have an
enculturating function. From the time of Margaret MEAD'S pioneering research on
CHILDREN and ADOLESCENCE it has been a continual topic of research and theory
in anthropology. Margaret Mead (1963) herself distinguished between enculturation,
the process of learning a particular culture, and socialization, which
she defined as the demands made on human beings by human societies everywhere.
Today the term commonly embraces both concepts.
Concept:
Culture is normally transmitted from generation to
generation by adults to children, and from those expert in a particular
cultural domain to novices. But this notion of a direct cultural transmission
may be misleading if it assumes that learning is essentially a passive process
without active involvement by the learner. Recent studies have stressed that
such active processes of meaning making are indispensable in acquiring culture
(J. Briggs 1992). Encounters that lead individuals to embody a specific culture
in their own experience, and thereby make it possible for them to be integrated
into the flow of social life, may be of various kinds. People encounter culture
in the form of significant others (parents, teachers, heroes) who embody
culture and with whom they come to identify, or they may encounter culture in
the form of rituals into which images of self and life are incorporated,
celebrated, and made experientially real (such as major life-crisis rituals of
puberty, marriage, childbearing, and death) (Parish 1994). As every
foreignlanguage student knows, to learn and use a language demands engagement
with the culture that produced it: and children learn culture as they learn
language (P. Miller & Hoogstra 1992; B. Schieffelin & Ochs 1986a). In
the stories they tell themselves and each other about the world and the nature
of their lives, society, and selves, people create and transmit cultural
constructs (P. Miller & Moore 1989; P. Miller et al. 1990).
Approaches:
Anthropologists began studying this phenomenon in the late
1800s. Unlike psychologists, they did not automatically assume that the
enculturation process was identical cross-culturally. Influenced by Freud, the
early work focused on set stages encountered in the first 3 years. Freud
believed that each individual experience in early childhood formed adult personality
and any deviation from a set pattern produced psychosis. However, in Margaret
Mead’s classic study, Coming of Age in Samoa (1928), child-rearing studies showed
that Freud’s stages were not universal; even the concept of adolescent angst
was foreign to the Samoan teenagers. Mead argued that no stage was common to
all cultures nor inevitably faced by a growing child. Children growing up in
Samoa developed different personality traits because their characters were
formed by different enculturation processes.
Following is a small class on enculturation (bilingual, meant for my students)
Following is a small class on enculturation (bilingual, meant for my students)
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