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pattern of cultureの例文

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  • Benedict, in " Patterns of Culture, " expresses her belief in cultural relativism.
  • Fortune's account was reiterated by Ruth Benedict in her popular work " Patterns of Culture ".
  • The Project focuses on long-term patterns of culture change in the context of dynamic interactions with the environment.
  • Therefore, the unmistakable clustering of the dates reflects a pattern of culture use, as opposed to natural phenomena.
  • In her book " Patterns of Culture ", Benedict studied the Pueblo culture and how they dealt with grieving and death.
  • Like any other extension of man, typography had psychic and social consequences that suddenly shifted previous boundaries and patterns of culture.
  • I remember Ruth Benedict's ` Patterns of Culture .'I didn't understand much of it, but I knew I'd come back to it.
  • The first debate was effectively suspended in 1934 when Ruth Benedict published " Patterns of Culture ", which has continuously been in print.
  • He incorporated and developed what was left from the Tiwanaku patterns of culture, and the Inca officials were superimposed upon the existing local officials.
  • He was influenced by art history and advised historians to trace " patterns of culture " by studying " themes, figures, motifs, symbols, styles and sentiments ."
  • Those typological areas are included in this project in an attempt to gain a better analysis of the patterns of culture and history of the ancient peoples of the Duck Valley.
  • She studied the relationships between personality, art, language and culture, insisting that no trait existed in isolation or self-sufficiency, a theory which she championed in her 1934 " Patterns of Culture ".
  • Here he argued that the end of Cold War confrontation and spread of free market systems made possible the establishment of a tight web of open sourced networks which overcome traditional geography and create new patterns of culture and trade.
  • An example of the impact of this idea can be seen in the book " Patterns of Culture ", where anthropologist Ruth Benedict uses Nietzschean opposites of " Apollonian " and " Dionysian " as the stimulus for her thoughts about Native American cultures.
  • Because of the isolation of the Gullah people on the coastal islands of Georgia and South Carolina after the Civil War, the Gullahs preserved a language and a way of life unique among African-American communities, including archaic West African and Elizabethan English patterns of culture and speech.
  • Other anthropologists of the " culture and personality " school also developed these ideas, notably Margaret Mead in her " Coming of Age in Samoa " ( published before " Patterns of Culture " ) and " Sex and Temperament in Three Primitive Societies " ( published just after Benedict's book came out ).
  • The essential idea in " Patterns of Culture " is, according to the foreword by Margaret Mead, " her view of human cultures as'personality writ large .'" As Benedict wrote in that book, " A culture, like an individual, is a more or less consistent pattern of thought and action " ( 46 ).
  • The region also invites attention because of a unique pattern of culture change in which two periods of increased social complexity, as evidenced by large numbers of formal cemeteries dating to the Early Neolithic and the Late Neolithic Bronze Age, are separated by a millennium-long Middle Neolithic period during which mortuary sites are entirely absent.
  • Although Benedict felt that virtually all cultures are patterned, she argued that these patterns change over time as a consequence of human creativity, and therefore different societies around the world had distinct characters . " Patterns of Culture " contrasts ZuHi, Dobu and Kwakiutl cultures as a way of highlighting different ways of being human.
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