The Hard Embodiment of Culture
The way humans move and comport their bodies is one way they (literally) carry their culture. In pre-wired embodiments, body comportment triggers basic, evolutionarily prepared affective and cognitive reactions that subsequently prime more complex representations. Culture suffuses this process, beca...
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sg-smu-ink.soss_research-17132017-11-10T06:59:46Z The Hard Embodiment of Culture COHEN, Dov LEUNG, Angela K. Y. The way humans move and comport their bodies is one way they (literally) carry their culture. In pre-wired embodiments, body comportment triggers basic, evolutionarily prepared affective and cognitive reactions that subsequently prime more complex representations. Culture suffuses this process, because (1) cultural artifacts, affordances, and practices make certain body comportments more likely, (2) cultural practices, rituals, schemas, and rules promote the learning of an otherwise underspecified connection between a given body comportment and a particular basic reaction, and (3) cultural meaning systems elaborate basic affective and cognitive reactions into more complex representations. These points are illustrated with three experiments that examine how moral systems can become embodied. We also discuss totem embodiments, in which cultural practices and rituals establish connections between body comportment and complex cultural representations, without the aid of any evolutionarily prepared connection to basic affective and cognitive states. 2009-12-01T08:00:00Z text application/pdf https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/soss_research/714 info:doi/10.1002/ejsp.671 https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/soss_research/article/1713/viewcontent/HardEmbodimentofCulture_2009_EJSP.pdf http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ Research Collection School of Social Sciences eng Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University cognition and culture moral conditions interpersonal relations and culture Social Psychology Sociology of Culture |
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cognition and culture moral conditions interpersonal relations and culture Social Psychology Sociology of Culture COHEN, Dov LEUNG, Angela K. Y. The Hard Embodiment of Culture |
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The way humans move and comport their bodies is one way they (literally) carry their culture. In pre-wired embodiments, body comportment triggers basic, evolutionarily prepared affective and cognitive reactions that subsequently prime more complex representations. Culture suffuses this process, because (1) cultural artifacts, affordances, and practices make certain body comportments more likely, (2) cultural practices, rituals, schemas, and rules promote the learning of an otherwise underspecified connection between a given body comportment and a particular basic reaction, and (3) cultural meaning systems elaborate basic affective and cognitive reactions into more complex representations. These points are illustrated with three experiments that examine how moral systems can become embodied. We also discuss totem embodiments, in which cultural practices and rituals establish connections between body comportment and complex cultural representations, without the aid of any evolutionarily prepared connection to basic affective and cognitive states. |
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text |
author |
COHEN, Dov LEUNG, Angela K. Y. |
author_facet |
COHEN, Dov LEUNG, Angela K. Y. |
author_sort |
COHEN, Dov |
title |
The Hard Embodiment of Culture |
title_short |
The Hard Embodiment of Culture |
title_full |
The Hard Embodiment of Culture |
title_fullStr |
The Hard Embodiment of Culture |
title_full_unstemmed |
The Hard Embodiment of Culture |
title_sort |
hard embodiment of culture |
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Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University |
publishDate |
2009 |
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https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/soss_research/714 https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/soss_research/article/1713/viewcontent/HardEmbodimentofCulture_2009_EJSP.pdf |
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