Dictionary Definition
acculturate v : assimilate culturally
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
- /əˈkʌltʃəˌreɪt/
Verb
- To change one's culture based on the influence of another culture.
- To be changed by acculturation.
Related terms
Italian
Verb
acculturate- Form of Second-person plural imperative, acculturare#Italian|acculturare
Extensive Definition
Acculturation is the exchange of cultural
features that results when groups come into continuous firsthand
contact; the original cultural patterns of either or both groups
may be altered, but the groups remain distinct. (Kottak 2007)
However, anthropologist Franz Boas (1888, pp.
631-632) argued that all people acculturate, not only "savages" and
minorities: "It is not too much to say that there is no people
whose customs have developed uninfluenced by foreign culture, that
has not borrowed arts and ideas which it has developed in its own
way", giving the example that "the steel harpoon used by American
and Scotch whalers is a slightly modified imitation of the Eskimo
harpoon".
Subsequently, anthropologists Redfield, Linton
and Herskovits (1936, p.149) developed the oft quoted definition:
"Acculturation comprehends those phenomena which result when groups
of individuals having different cultures come into continuous
first-hand contact, with subsequent changes in the original culture
patterns of either or both groups".
Despite definitions and evidence that
acculturation entails two-way processes of change, research and
theory have continued with a focus on the adjustments and changes
experienced by aboriginal peoples, immigrants, sojourners, and
other minorities in response to their contact with the dominant
majority.
Thus, acculturation can be conceived to be the
processes of cultural learning imposed upon minorities by the fact
of being minorities. If enculturation is first-culture learning,
then acculturation is second-culture learning. This has often been
conceived to be a unidimensional, zero-sum cultural conflict in
which the minority's culture is displaced by the dominant group's
culture in a process of assimilation.
The traditional definition sometimes
differentiates between acculturation by an individual
(transculturation) and that by a group - usually very large
(acculturation).
Additionally, "acculturation" has been used by
Matusevich as a term describing the paradigm shift public schools
must undergo in order to successfully integrate emerging
technologies in a meaningful way into classrooms (Matusevich,
1995). The old and the new additional definitions have a boundary
that blurs in modern multicultural societies,
where a child of an immigrant family might be encouraged to
acculturate both the dominant also well as the ancestral culture,
either of which may be considered "foreign", but in fact, they are
both integral parts of the child's development.
Beginning perhaps with Child (1943) and Lewin
(1948), acculturation began to be conceived as the strategic
reaction of the minority to continuous contact with the dominant
group. See Rudmin's 2003 tabulation of acculturation
theories.http://www.ac.wwu.edu/~culture/rudmin.htmThus,
there are several options the minority can choose, each with
different motivations and different consequences. These options
include assimilation to the majority culture, a defensive assertion
of the minority culture, a bicultural blending of the two cultures,
a bicultural alternation between cultures depending on contexts, or
a diminishment of both cultures. Following Berry's (1980; 2003)
terminology, four major options or strategies are now commonly
called assimilation, separation, integration, and
marginalization.
Acculturative stress refers to the psychological,
somatic, and social difficulties that may accompany acculturation
processes. This was first noted by Redfield, Linton and Herskovits
(1936, p. 152), calling it "psychic conflict" that may arise from
conflicting cultural norms. Born (1970) and Berry (1980) have
theorized that acculturative stress is a fundamental psychological
force in acculturative processes. Ausbel (1960) first measured
"acculturative stress", and many have since claimed that it is a
significant problem for many minority people (e.g., Berry, Kim,
Minde & Mok, 1983 http://www.jstor.org/view/01979183/di009755/00p0034i/0;
Burnam, Hough, Karno, Escobar & Telles, 1987; Hovey, 2000).
However, many studies have found no evidence that acculturation is
distressful (e.g., Inkeles, 1969http://www.jstor.org/view/00912131/ap020010/02a00160/0;
Rudmin, 2006http://malinowski.kent.ac.uk/docs/rudminf_acculturation_061204.pdf).
In fact, in a study of 55 samples in 13 nations, Sam, Vedder, Ward
and Horenczyk (2006, pp. 127-130) found that immigrant adolescents
had better mental health than their non-immigrant classmates.
Group foreign-origin acculturation
Massive intake of another culture's traits is the most classical and narrow definition of "acculturation". Such acculturation may be adequately adapted into another's, modernizing and advancing it through the inflow of technology or the enrichment of literature. For example,- The Chinese written language (Hanzi) was taken, with various degrees of modification by places that previously have no written records: Japan (as Kanji), Korea (as Hanja), and Vietnam (as Chữ-nôm). In addition, Chinese vocabulary had also been taken throughout the history. They have therefore developed a linguistic affinity in several, though not nearly all, aspects -- called the CJKV language family in computer science.
But sometimes, the acculturation has irreversible
impact of damaging the recipient culture, as in the cases of:
- Many indigenous peoples, such as First Nations of Canada, Native Americans of the USA, Taiwanese aborigines, and Australian Aborigines -- have mostly lost their traditional culture (most evidently language) and replaced by that of the dominant new culture.
Such later detrimental case is related to
assimilation.
The term has most often described Westernization
Natives having adopted to Western cultures.
- The founders of Liberia were the descendants, just a few generations removed, of African ancestors who had a completely African culture; yet they have fully taken up the white-dominated cultural values of the early 19th Century United States (specifically, of the then dominant Whig Party), to the extent that their settlement in Africa and rule over the native population there were clearly in the manner of foreign colonisers rather than of "Africans returning home".
Pidgin is a mixed
language that has developed to help communication between members
of different cultures in contact. This usually occurs in situations
of trade or colonialism. Pidgin English is a simplified form of
English. It blends English grammar with that of a native language.
This was first used in Chinese ports and similar pidgins have
developed in Papua New Guinea and West Africa.
In situations of continuous contact, cultures
have exchanged and blended foods, recipes, music, dances, clothing,
tools, and technologies.
Transculturation
Main article: TransculturationTransculturation, or individual foreign-origin
acculturation, is on a smaller scale with less visible
impact.
This most often occurs to first-generation
immigrants, for whom transculturation is most difficult, due to the
lack of precedents in the family. The speed of transculturation
varies, depending on the recipient's interest and the presence of a
motivation.
Another common, but less lasting, acculturation
effects occur after a traveller spent a while in a foreign place.
S/he may pick up some regional vocabulary, especially if the
languages are in the same family.
Native-origin acculturation
A child may learn one or more traditions(multicultural family of immigrants) from birth, usually from the family (blood or adopted), in particularly the parents.Inevitably, with each generation, the dominant
culture becomes more and more the dominantly accultured one for the
immigrants' descendants. A good example of native origin
acculturation would be the Inuit, these people started to share
their traditions when the Canadian Governement went to the
Artic.
History of acculturation
Early written codes of law, for example, the Old Testament law of Moses, or the Babylonian law of Hammurabi, acted to stabilize cultural practices and reduce acculturative changes. Probably the first academic account of acculturation appears in Plato's, Laws http://oll.libertyfund.org/Home3/Book.php?recordID=0813written in the 4th century BC, in which he argued that humans have a tendency to imitate strangers and a tendency to like to travel, both of which introduce new cultural practices. Plato argued that this should be minimized to the degree possible.J.W. Powell is credited with coining the word
"acculturation," first using it in an 1880 report by the US Bureau
of American Ethnography. In 1883, Powell defined "acculturation" to
be the psychological changes induced by cross-cultural imitation.
The first psychological study of acculturation was probably Thomas
and Znaniecki's 1918 study of The Polish Peasant in Europe and
America. http://chla.library.cornell.edu/c/chla/browse/title/3074959.html
Since then, scholars in different disciplines
have developed more than 100 different theories of acculturation.
http://www.ac.wwu.edu/~culture/rudmin.htmPaul
Campisi, in 1947, was the first to make a "A Scale for the
Measurement of Acculturation".
Histories of acculturation theory have been
written (in chronological order) by Sarah Simons (1901), Isaac
Berkson (1920), W. D. Borrie (1959), Guido Baglioni (1964),http://www.jstor.org/view/05388716/di009675/00p0044n/0Harold
Abramson (1980), and Floyd Rudmin (2003a; b; 2006).http://www.ac.wwu.edu/~culture/rudmin.htm
Cultural appropriation
Cultural appropriation is the adoption of some
specific elements of one culture by a different cultural group. It
can include the introduction of forms of dress or personal
adornment, music and
art, religion, language, or behavior. These
elements are typically imported into the existing culture, and may
have wildly different meanings or lack the subtleties of their
original cultural context. Because of this, cultural appropriation
is sometimes viewed negatively, and has been called "cultural
theft."
Cultural imperialism
Cultural imperialism is the practice of promoting
the culture or language
of one nation in another. It is usually the case that the former is
a large, economically or militarily powerful nation and the latter
is a smaller, less affluent one. Cultural imperialism can take the
form of an active, formal policy or a general attitude.
Interactive acculturation
Interactive acculturation is an amalgam of
theories that attempt to explain the acculturation process within a
framework of state policies and the dynamic interplay of host
community and immigrant acculturation orientations. In the late
90’s a team comprised of Richard Y. Bourhis, Lena Celine Moise,
Stephane Perreault, and Sacha Senecal… first postulated a theory in
a journal of psychology article entitled Towards an Interactive
Acculturation Model: A Social Psychological Approach. The premise
of the model expounds on some of the earlier work by academics like
Young, Padilla and Graves but emphasizes a new angle of interest;
the structural host nation policies and subsequent
socio-psychological effect as well as the dynamics between
immigrant populations and the host culture they move into.
See also
- Colonialism
- Colorism
- Creolization
- Cultural assimilation
- Cultural identity
- Colonial mentality
- Cultural Alienation
- Cultural cringe
- Enculturation
- Ethnocide
- Globalization
- Intercultural competence
- Language shift
- Melting pot
- Passing (racial identity)
- Paper Bag Party
- Race
- Racialism
- Racism
- Social interpretations of race
- Syncretism
- Westernization
External links
- Examples of traditional definition: Palomar Community College
- Catalog of acculturation theories
- From Paris to Cairo: Resistance of the Unacculturated by Adel Iskandar and Hakem Rustom
References
- Abramson, H. (1980). Assimilation and pluralism. In S. Thernstrom (Ed.), Harvard encyclopedia of American ethnic groups (pp. 150-160). Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
- Baglioni, G. (1964). Trends in the studies on the socio-cultural integration of immigrants. International Migration Digest, 1, 125-128.
- Berkson, I. B. (1969). Theories of acculturation: A critical study. New York: Arno Press. (Original work published in 1920.)
- Berry, J. W. (1980). Social and cultural change. In H. C. Triandis, & R. W. Brislin (Eds.), Handbook of cross-cultural psychology: Social psychology (vol. 5, pp. 211-279). Boston: Allyn and Bacon.
- Berry, J. W. (2003). Conceptual approaches to acculturation. In K. M. Chun, P. B. Organista, & G. Marín (Eds.), Acculturation: Advances in theory, measurement and applied research (pp. 17-37). Washington, D.C.: American Psychological Assoc.
- Berry, J. W., Kim, U., Minde, T., & Mok, D. (1987). Comparative studies of acculturative stress. International Migration Review, 21, 491-511.
- Boas, F. (1940). The aims of ethnology. Reprinted in F. Boas, Race, language, and culture (pp. 626-638). New York: Macmillan. (Originally published in 1888.)
- Born, D. O. (1970). Psychological adaptation and development under acculturative stress. Social Science and Medicine, 3, 529-547.
- Borrie, W. D. (1959). The cultural integration of immigrants: A survey based upon the papers and proceedings of the UNESCO Conference held in Havana, April 1956. New York: Columbia University Press.
- Burnham, M. A., Hough, R. L., Karno, M., Escobar, J. I., & Telles, C. A. (1987). Acculturation and lifetime prevalence of psychiatric disorders among Mexican Americans in Los Angeles. Journal of Health and Social Behavior, 28, 89-102.
- Child, I .L. (1970). Italian or American? The second generation in conflict. New York: Russell & Russell. (Original work published 1943.)
- Hovey, J. D. (2000). Psychosocial predictors of depression among Central American immigrants. Psychological Reports, 86, 1237-1240.
- Inkeles, A. (1969). Making men modern: On the causes and consequences of individual change in sex developing countries. American Journal of Sociology, 75, 208-225.
- Kottak, Conrad Phillip (2005) Windows on Humanity, pages 209, 423. McGraw Hill, New York.
- Lewin, K. (1948). Resolving social conflicts. New York: Harper & Row.
- Metusevich, Meliss. "School Reform: What Role can Technology Play in a Constructivist Setting?." May 1995 1-8. July 18 2006 http://pixel.cs.vt.edu/edu/fis/techcons.html
- Redfield R., Linton R., Herskovits M.J. (1936) Memorandum for the Study of Acculturation. American Anthropologist, Vol. 38, No. 1, 149-152.
- Rudmin, F. W. (2003a). Critical history of the acculturation psychology of assimilation, separation, integration, and marginalization. Review of General Psychology, 7, 3-37.
- Rudmin, F. W. (2003b). Field notes from the quest for the first use of "acculturation". Cross-Cultural Psychology Bulletin, 37 (4), 24-31.
- Rudmin, F. W. (2006) Debate in science: The case of acculturation. In AnthroGlobe Journal. Retrieved March 17, 2007 from http://malinowski.kent.ac.uk/docs/rudminf_acculturation_061204.pdf
- Sam, D. L., Vedder, P., Ward, C., & Hoarenczyk, G. (2006). Psychological and sociocultural adaptation of immigrant youth. In J. W. Berry, J. S. Phinney, D. L. Sam, & P. Vedder. (Eds.), Immigrant youth in cultural transition: Acculturation, identity and adaptation across national contexts ( pp. 117-141). London: Lawrence Erlbaum.
- Simons, S. (1901). Social assimilation. Parts I, II, III, IV & V. American Journal of Sociology, 6, 790-822; 7, 53-79, 234-248, 386-404, 539-556.
acculturate in Bengali: সাংস্কৃতায়ন
acculturate in Catalan: Aculturació
acculturate in Czech: Akulturace
acculturate in Danish: Akkulturation
acculturate in German: Akkulturation
acculturate in Spanish: Aculturación
acculturate in French: Acculturation
acculturate in Galician: Aculturación
acculturate in Indonesian: Akulturasi
acculturate in Italian: Acculturazione
acculturate in Lithuanian: Akultūracija
acculturate in Japanese: アカルチュレーション
acculturate in Polish: Akulturacja
acculturate in Portuguese: Aculturação
acculturate in Russian: Аккультурация
acculturate in Serbian: Акултурација
acculturate in Finnish:
Akkulturaatio