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  2. Culture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Culture

    Non-material culture refers to the non-physical ideas that individuals have about their culture, including values, belief systems, rules, norms, morals, language, organizations, and institutions, while material culture is the physical evidence of a culture in the objects and architecture they make or have made.

  3. Wikipedia:Contents/Culture and the arts - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Contents/Culture...

    In general, culture refers to human activity; different definitions of culture reflect different theories for understanding, or criteria for valuing human activity. Present-day anthropologists use the term to refer to the universal human capacity to classify experiences and to encode and communicate them symbolically. They regard this capacity ...

  4. The arts - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_arts

    The term has generally come to identify a collection of writings, which in Western culture are mainly prose (both fiction and non-fiction), drama, and poetry. In much, if not all, of the world, artistic linguistic expression can be oral as well and include such genres as epic , legend , myth , ballad , other forms of oral poetry, and folktales .

  5. Cultural identity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cultural_identity

    Cultural identity can be expressed through certain styles of clothing or other aesthetic markers. Cultural identity is a part of a person's identity, or their self-conception and self-perception, and is related to nationality, ethnicity, religion, social class, generation, locality, gender, or any kind of social group that has its own distinct culture.

  6. Visual culture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Visual_culture

    Visual culture is the aspect of culture expressed in visual images. Many academic fields study this subject, including cultural studies , art history , critical theory , philosophy , media studies , Deaf Studies , [ 1 ] and anthropology .

  7. Popular culture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Popular_culture

    This early layer of cultural mainstream still persists today, in a form separate from mass-produced popular culture, propagating by word of mouth rather than via mass media, e.g. in the form of jokes or urban legends. With the widespread use of the Internet from the 1990s, the distinction between mass media and word-of-mouth has become blurred.

  8. 20 iconic slang words from Black Twitter that shaped pop culture

    www.aol.com/20-iconic-slang-words-black...

    "Fierce" may easily describe lions or other grand, wild animals, but nowadays, the term is given to someone confident and eye-catching. The term entered the mainstream in part thanks to Beyoncé's ...

  9. High culture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/High_culture

    The Creation of Adam, from Michelangelo’s Sistine Chapel ceiling – an example of high culture. In a society, high culture encompasses cultural objects of aesthetic value which a society collectively esteems as being exemplary works of art, [1] as well as the intellectual works of literature and music, history and philosophy which a society considers representative of their culture.