Cultural literacy

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
(Redirected from
Cultural Literacy
)

Cultural literacy is a term coined by American educator and literary critic

symbols, including its language, particular dialectic, stories,[1] entertainment, idioms
, idiosyncrasies, and so on. The culturally literate person is able to talk to and understand others of that culture with fluency.

Causes

Children of a given culture typically become culturally literate there via the process of enculturation. Enculturation seems to occur naturally, being intertwined with education, play, family relationships, friendships, etc. The cause of cultural literacy is a more difficult question when considering acculturation of immigrants, outsiders, cultural minorities, strangers, guests, etc.

Literacy of a given culture seems to arise over time with consistent exposure to and participation in that culture, especially certain key cultural strongholds, like business, story, arts, education, history, religion, and family. One could become literate for an oral culture (with no written language or recorded media) only by extended conversation. Alternatively, one could become literate for a written culture through conversation as well as reading culturally relevant books or exposure to culturally relevant films, plays, monuments, television shows, etc.

Western culture in general and Anglo-American culture in particular is a bibliocentric culture. It often trades in allusions to the Christian Bible,[2] the influential works of Early Modern English such as works of William Shakespeare, the Thomas Cranmer Book of Common Prayer, Geoffrey Chaucer's poetry, and many others. Knowledge of these books (among others) contributes largely to cultural literacy in the west. However, also essential are exposure to the art, history, and the lived experience of members of that culture.[citation needed]

Examples

For example, in 1908 British author

insane asylum
.

Consequences

The benefits and detriments of cultural literacy are debated.[by whom?] For example, social mobility increases when one is able to comfortably participate in conversation with gatekeepers like employers and teachers. Non-native members of a culture, such as missionaries to a foreign land or refugees from a native land, may experience negative consequences due to cultural illiteracy. However, the achievement of cultural literacy may seem to come at a cost to one's own native culture.[citation needed]

Research and questions

Discussions of cultural literacy have given rise to several controversial questions:[4]

See also

References

  1. JSTOR 40171117
    .
  2. .
  3. ^ Chesterton, G. K. (1908). Orthodoxy. Chapter II, "The Maniac".{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  4. JSTOR 40171113
    .
  5. .

Further reading