The Cultural Landscape
Cultural Patterns and Diffusion
Causes of Diffusion
Religion and Language
Effects of Diffusion
100

A single aspect of a given culture or society

cultural trait

100

Efforts to use and design public places to better serve the needs of residents and to foster a stronger community

Placemaking

100

The act of forcefully controlling a foreign territory, which becomes known as a colony

colonialism

100

Less influenced or controlled by religion

secular

100

Occurs when an ethnic or immigrant group blends in with the host culture and loses many culturally distinctive traits

assimilation

200

Heterogeneous culture that is more influenced by key urban areas and quick to adopt new technologies; the opposite of a local culture

popular culture

200

A focused geographic area where important innovations are born and from which they spread

culture hearth
200

The idea that cultures are converging, or becoming more alike

convergence hypothesis

200

The names given to places

toponyms

200

Occurs when an ethnic or immigrant group adopts enough of the ways of the host society to be able to function economically and socially

acculturation

300

The feeling resulting from the standardization of the built environment; occurs where local distinctiveness is erased and many places end up with similar cultural landscapes

placelessness

300

Barriers that completely halt diffusion

absorbing barriers

300

The phenomenon whereby the introduction of new transportation technology progressively reduces the time it takes to travel between places

time-space convergence

300

A regional variation of a language that is understood by people who speak other variations of that language

dialect

300

The blending of beliefs, ideas, practices, and traits, especially in a religious context

syncretism

400

An approach to understanding other cultures that seeks to understand individuals and cultures from a wider perspective of cultural logic

cultural relativism

400

A force that brings people together and unifies a neighborhood, society, or country

centripetal force

400

A language of communication and commerce spoken across a wide area where it is not the mother tongue

lingua franca
400

A religion that actively seeks new members and believes its message has universal importance and application

universalizing religion

400

The notion that people adopt elements of other cultures as well as contribute elements of their own culture, thereby transforming both cultures

transculturation
500

Refers to the fact that many places have been controlled or affected by a variety of groups over a period of time; those groups have reshaped the functions or meanings of those places and left behind layers of meaning

sequent occupance

500

The systematic killing of members of a racial, ethnic, or linguistic group

genocide

500
Adapting global practices to fit local cultural practices and preferences
glocalization
500

A trade language, characterized by a very small vocabulary derived from the languages of at least two or more groups in contact

pidgin

500

Religion that emphasizes purity of faith and is generally not open to blending with elements of other belief systems

orthodox religion