3(b) Culture as an Integrated-Closed System — Drawbacks (15 Marks)
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3(b) Critically examine the drawbacks in assuming culture as an integrated-closed system in understanding of contemporary society (15 M)

Introduction

The idea of culture as an integrated and closed system emerged prominently during the early functional and structural traditions in anthropology. Bronislaw Malinowski (1944, A Scientific Theory of Culture) defined culture as a “functional whole” in which every institution is interdependent and serves to fulfill basic (biological), instrumental, and integrative needs of individuals. Similarly, A.R. Radcliffe-Brown (1952, Structure and Function in Primitive Society) emphasized the concept of social systems as self-regulating units where cultural institutions maintain equilibrium and social order.

Body

Conclusion

The conception of culture as an integrated-closed system was valuable in highlighting cultural coherence and systemic analysis. However, it suffers from serious drawbacks: it neglects change and history, internal contradictions, conflict, inequality, and globalization-driven hybridity.

Thinkers / Works Cited

  • Bronislaw Malinowski — A Scientific Theory of Culture (1944)
  • A. R. Radcliffe-Brown — Structure and Function in Primitive Society (1952)
  • Julian Steward — Theory of Culture Change (1955)
  • Eric R. Wolf — Europe and the People Without History (1982)
  • Clifford Geertz — The Interpretation of Cultures (1973)
  • M. N. Srinivas — Religion and Society among the Coorgs of South India (1952)
  • Gail Omvedt — Dalits and the Democratic Revolution (1994)
  • Pierre Bourdieu — Outline of a Theory of Practice (1977)
  • Nancy Scheper-Hughes — Death Without Weeping (1992)
  • Leela Dube — Women and Kinship (1997)
  • Arjun Appadurai — Modernity at Large (1996)
  • Ulf Hannerz — Cultural Complexity (1992)
  • Johannes Fabian — Time and the Other (1983)

Key Terms

  • Integrated-Closed System
  • Functionalism / Structuralism
  • Ethnographic Present
  • Multilinear Evolution
  • Webs of Meaning
  • Sanskritization
  • Structural Violence
  • Habitus & Symbolic Power
  • Global “Scapes”
  • Hybridity & Transnational Flows
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