Bronze Age Poltavkaculture , 2700&mdash 2100 BC, an early to middle Bronze Age archaeological culture of the middle Volga from about where the Don Volga canal begins up to the Samara bend , with an easterly extension north of present Kazakhstan along the Samara River valley to somewhat west of Orenburg . It is like the Catacomb culture preceded by the Yamna culture , while succeeded by the Sintashta culture . It seems to be seen as an early manifestation of the Srubna culture . There is evidence of influence from the Maykop culture to its south. The only real things that distinguish it from the Yamna culture are changes in pottery and an increase in metal objects. Tumulus inhumation s continue, but with less use of ochre . It was preceded by the Yamna culture and succeeded by the Srubna culture Srubna and Sintashta culture . It is presumptively early Indo Iranians Indo Iranian Proto Indo Iranian . Sources J. P. Mallory , PoltavkaCulture , Encyclopedia of Indo European Culture , Fitzroy Dearborn, 1997. See also Yamna culture Sintashta culture Andronovo culture Srubna culture Abashevo culture Potapovka culture Category Indo European Category Archaeological cultures Category Eurasian nomads Category Ancient peoples Category Encyclopedia of Indo European Culture Category Bronze Age Europe Category Archaeology of Russia Category Archaeology of Kazakhstan es Cultura de Poltavka it Cultura di Poltavka ru ... more details
coord 39 42 04 N 48 06 15 E display title Infobox settlement official name Poltavka native name pushpin map Azerbaijan pushpin mapsize 300 coordinates region AZ subdivision type Country subdivision name flag Azerbaijan subdivision type1 Administrative divisions of Azerbaijan Rayon subdivision name1 Imishli Rayon Imishli leader title leader name established title established date area total km2 area footnotes population as of population total population density km2 timezone Azerbaijan Time AZT utc offset 4 timezone DST Azerbaijan Time AZT utc offset DST 5 latd 39 latm 42 lats 04 latNS N longd 48 longm 06 longs 15 longEW E elevation m area code website Poltavka is a village in the Imishli Rayon of Azerbaijan . References GEOnet2 32FA8814FE473774E0440003BA962ED3 Imishli Rayon Category Populated places in Imishli Rayon Imishli geo stub ... more details
File Natalkapoltavka.jpg thumb right Scene from Natalka Poltavka on the Kotlyarevsky monument in Poltava sculptor L. Pozen 1903 Natalka Poltavka lang uk , Natalka from Poltava is a Ukraine Ukrainian play written by Ivan Kotlyarevsky . History The play was written in 1819 in the Ukrainian language , first performed in 1821 in the city of Kharkiv , ref cite web url http www.encyclopediaofukraine.com display.asp?AddButton pages K H Kharkiv.htm title Kharkiv accessdate 2008 01 24 work Encyclopedia of Ukraine ref though it was not available in print until 1838. ref cite book title Music in the Culture of Polish Galicia, 1772 1914 last Pekacz first Jolanta T. year 2002 publisher Boydell & Brewer isbn 1580461093 ref The play served as the basis for the operetta Natalka Poltavka opera Natalka Poltavka by Ukrainian composer Mykola Lysenko , and it has also been made into a number of films in Ukraine and abroad. The play has the features of classicist poetics and also, in keeping with the spirit of Ukrainian national rebirth of the period in which it was written, a distinct interest in the lives of the common Ukrainian people and peasant s. This latter element accounts for its great popularity in Ukraine both at the time of its writing to the present day, and also its influence ... of the Russian officials of the day. ref cite news title Natalka Poltavka 1936 url http movies.nytimes.com movie 144525 Natalka Poltavka overview work The New York Times accessdate 2008 01 24 ... by Ivan Kavaleridze. ref imdb title 0028022 Natalka Poltavka 1936 ref This film was the first ... title 0029295 Natalka Poltavka 1937 ref This was the first Ukrainian language film produced in the United ... publisher Ayer Publishing isbn 0405005520 pages 90 ref Opera adaptation Main Natalka Poltavka opera ... DEFAULTSORT Natalya Poltavka Category Ukrainian music Category Ukrainian plays Category Ukrainian culture ru uk ... more details
Orphan date February 2009 Stari Poltavka or Old Poltavka is a village on the Yeruslan River in the Volgograd Oblast of Russia. Founded in the first half of the 19th Century by immigrants from the Ukraine, Stari Poltavka is the administrative center of the Staropoltavsky District . The nearest railroad station is at Gmelinskaya , on the Volgograd Saratov line. coord 50 29 N 46 29 E display title region RU type city source GNS enwiki Category Rural localities in Volgograd Oblast it Staraja Poltavka ru ... more details
Geobox Settlement Heading name Poltavka native name other name category Village Names etymology official name motto nickname Image image image caption image size Symbols flag symbol Country country Kyrgyzstan state region Chuy Province district Jaiyl District municipality Family part landmark river Locations location elevation prominence lat d 42 lat m 50 lat s 37.4 lat NS N long d 73 long m 57 long s 20 long EW E coordinates type region KG type city source GNS enwiki highest highest location highest region highest state highest elevation highest lat d highest lat m highest lat s highest lat NS highest long d highest long m highest long s highest long EW lowest lowest location lowest region lowest state lowest elevation lowest lat d lowest lat m lowest lat s lowest lat NS lowest long d lowest long m lowest long s lowest long EW Dimensions length length orientation width width orientation area area land area water area urban area metro Population population 4321 population date 2009 population urban population metro population density population density urban population density metro History & management established 1908 date government government location government region government state government elevation government lat d government lat m government lat s government lat NS government long d government long m government long s government long EW mayor leader Codes timezone utc offset timezone DST utc offset DST postal code area code code UNESCO etc. whs name whs year whs number whs region whs criteria iucn category Free fields free free type Maps map map caption map background map locator Websites commons statistics website http www.jaiyl.kg ru main aiil okrug Poltavskii Footnotes footnotes Poltavka lang ru is a village in the Jaiyl District of Chuy .... It is a center of Poltavka aiyl okmotu rural community . Bishkek Osh road passes through the settlement ... isbn 5897500835 pages 718 ref ref Cite web last first title Poltavka rural community web page in Russian ... more details
Natalka Poltavka English Natalka from Poltava is an opera in three acts by the Ukrainians Ukrainian composer Mykola Lysenko , based on the play Natalka Poltavka by Ivan Kotlyarevsky , first performed in 1889. Background The original version of Kotlyarevsky s play in 1819 contained a number of Ukrainian folk songs which were sung at different points throughout the work. The first known musical adaptation of the play was made by Kharkiv musician A. Barsytsky and was published in 1833. Simultaneously the play starring M. Shchepkin as Vyborny was premiered in Moscow in the 1830 s with music arranged by the head violinist and later conductor A. Gurianov. Later arrangements were made by A. Yedlichka, M. Vasyliev and others. Lysenko s version Lysenko began to work on the opera in 1864 but put it aside, lacking experience in writing for the opera stage. His eventual 1889 version upstaged all the previous versions of the work. Lysenko took the original songs from the play, which were lengthened, and wrote orchestral accompaniments to the folk songs and dances in the play. He enlarged the musical tapestry, producing background music to some parts. The songs were transformed into aria s, and an overture and musical entracts were added which stayed true to the spirit of Kotlyarevsky s play. Although Lysenko s version is usually categorised as an opera ref e.g. in Oxford Music Online , Lysenko, Mykola ref , it is more comparable to an opera comique , containing as it does long stretches of spoken dialogue. Attempts were made to transform the work into Grand Opera with the addition of music by V. Iorish were not successful. The Kiev State Opera returned to Lysenko s original version. Performances The opera was first performed in Odessa in Russian language Russian , on 12 24 November 1889 ... Natalka Poltavka 1936 ref This film was the first adaptation of an opera produced in the former ... year 1997 publisher Routledge isbn 9783718659111 pages p. 59 ref Notes Reflist DEFAULTSORT Natalka Poltavka ... more details
refimprove date February 2011 The Culture is a fiction al interstellar anarchist , socialism socialist ... banks cultnote.htm A Few Notes on the Culture Iain Banks Banks, Iain M. ref society created by the Scotland ... novels and works of short fiction by him, collectively called the Culture series . Overview The Culture ... of force or compulsion, except where necessary to protect others. Mind The Culture Minds , powerful ..., is clear one of the problems with the Culture novels as novels is that the central characters, the Minds, are too powerful and, to put it bluntly, too good. ref name SCLIB The novels of the Culture cycle, therefore, mostly deal with people at the fringes of the Culture diplomats, spies, or mercenaries those who interact with other civilizations, and who do the Culture s dirty work in moving those societies closer to the Culture ideal, sometimes by force. Fictional history In this fictional universe, the Culture exists concurrently with human society on Earth. The time frame for the published Culture stories is from roughly AD 1300 to AD 2970, with Earth being Contact The Culture contacted around AD 2100, though the Culture had covertly visited the planet in the 1970s in The State of the Art . The Culture itself is described as having been created when several humanoid species and machine ... evolution into their own hands. In The Player of Games , the Culture is described as having existed as a space faring society for eleven thousand years. Society and culture Capability The Culture ..., or by people who take on the work out of free choice . As such, the Culture is also a post scarcity .... As a consequence, the Culture has no need of economic constructs such as money as is apparent when it deals with civilizations in which money is still important . The Culture rejects all forms of economics ... in the Culture. Language Marain is the Culture s shared language. Designed by early Minds, the Culture ... form, Marain is also regarded as an aesthetically pleasing language by the Culture. The symbols of the Marain ... more details
About Culture as used in the Social science social sciences and Humanities humantities uses in the Natural sciences natural sciences Cell culture and Tissue culture other uses File gyptischer Maler um ... Hasht Behesht Hasht Behesht Palace When Culture lang la wikt cultura cultura , lit. cultivation ref Harper, Douglas 2001 . http www.etymonline.com index.php?term culture Online Etymology Dictionary ref ... the term culture to refer to a universal human capacity. For the German nonpositivist sociologist Georg Simmel , culture referred to the cultivation of individuals through the agency of external forms ..., culture emerged as a concept central to anthropology , encompassing all human phenomena that are not purely results of human genetics. Specifically, the term culture in American anthropology had two ... the physical artifacts created by a society , its so called material culture and everything else ... such as language, customs, etc. that are the main referent of the term culture . Etymology The etymology of the modern term culture has a classics classical origin. In English, the word culture is based on a term used by Cicero in his Tusculan Disputations , where he wrote of a cultivation ... after Rousseau Philosophy and Culture in Question last Velkley first Richard year 2002 chapter The Tension in the Beautiful On Culture and Civilization in Rousseau and German Philosophy pages 11 ... As described by Velkley ref name velkley blockquote The term culture, which originally meant the cultivation ... modern liberalism and Age of Enlightenment Enlightenment . Thus a contrast between culture and civilization is usually implied in these authors, even when not expressed as such. Two primary meanings of culture emerge from this period culture as the folk spirit having a unique identity, and culture as cultivation ... of the term culture, although the second still plays a large role in what we think culture should ... a universal model of culture. The German philosopher Immanuel Kant 1724 1804 formulated an individualist ... more details
Bronze Age Potapovka culture , ca. 2500&mdash 2000 BC. A Bronze Age culture centered on the Samara bend in the middle Volga region, projecting well east into the Samara River valley. It seems to be connected only in a material culture way with the earlier stage of the Andronovo culture Sintashta and Petrovka settlement Petrovka period , but probably genetically to the Poltavkaculture , with influences from the more northerly Abashevo culture . Loosely, it can be considered as descended from the earlier Khvalynsk culture and Samara culture , both of which occupied this same geographic extent. The inhumation s are in kurgans tumuli . Smaller less important graves surround the original tumulus. Animals, either whole or in parts, were among the grave offerings cattle, sheep, goats, dogs . One burial has the corpse s head replaced with that of a horse, reminiscent of the Vedic account of how the Asv ns replace the head of the priest Dadhya c Artharvana with that of a horse so that he could reveal the secret of the sacred drink. &mdash EIEC Potapovka Culture The culture was clearly comfortable with horses. Wheels and wheeled vehicles are equivocally identified in the remains. Mallory argues that the Potapovka culture s lack of a clear genetic relationship with the early Andronovo culture, and that the Andronovo lacks an immediate local ancestor, the cultural trajectory for the Indo European societies of this region need to be seen as coming from the west. It was preceded by the Yamna culture , and succeeded by the Srubna culture . Sources J. P. Mallory , Potapovka Culture , Encyclopedia of Indo European Culture , Fitzroy Dearborn, 1997. DEFAULTSORT Potapovka Culture Category Indo European Category Archaeological cultures of Eastern Europe Category Eurasian nomads Category Encyclopedia of Indo European Culture Category Bronze Age Europe Category Archaeology of Russia es Cultura de Potapovka ... more details
Image Srubna hut.jpg thumb 250px A reconstructed hut of the Srubna culture. The Srubna culture lang ru , lang uk , also lang en Timber grave culture , was a Late Bronze Age 18th 12th centuries BC culture. It is a successor to the Yamna culture Pit Grave culture and the Poltavkaculture . It occupied the area along and above the north shore of the Black Sea from the Dnieper eastwards along the northern base of the Caucasus to the area abutting the north shore of the Caspian Sea , west of the Ural Mountains to come up against the domain of the approximately contemporaneous and somewhat related Andronovo culture . The name comes from Russian c srub , timber framework , from the way graves were constructed. Animal parts were buried with the body. The economy was mixed agriculture and livestock breeding. The historical Cimmerians have been suggested as descended from this culture. The Srubna culture is succeeded by Scythians and Sarmatians in the 1st millennium BC, and by Khazar s and Kipchak people Kipchak s in the first millennium AD. Artifacts center class graytable style text align center Srubna objects from the Hermitage Museum collections span width 32 Image Srubna culture01.jpg center 163px width 28 Image Srubna culture04.jpg center 163px width 20 Image Srubna culture05.jpg center 163px center Sources J. P. Mallory , Srubna Culture , Encyclopedia of Indo European Culture , Fitzroy Dearborn, 1997. commonscat inline Srubna culture Bronze Age footer Category Ancient peoples Category Archaeological cultures Category Indo European Category Encyclopedia of Indo European Culture Category Bronze Age Europe Category Cimmerians Europe archaeology stub Link GA ru bg de Srubna Kultur es Cultura de Srubna fa fr Culture de Srubna it Cultura di Srubna nl Sroebnacultuur no T mmergravkulturen pl Kultura grob w zr bowych ru uk vi V n h a ... more details
of speculation, reflecting both northern penetration of the earlier Iranian steppe Poltavkaculture as well as an extension of Fatyanovo Balanovo traditions ref J. P. Mallory, Abashevo Culture, Encyclopedia of Indo European Culture, Fitzroy Dearborn, 1997, p 2 ref Skulls of the Abashevo differ from those of the Timber grave, earlier Catacomb culture , or the Potapovka culture . ref Elena E. Kuz ... See also Fatyanovo Balanovo culturePoltavkaculture Sintashta culture Potapovka culture Srubna culture ...Bronze Age Abashevo culture is a later Bronze Age ca. 2500 1900 BCE archaeological culture found in the valleys ... that descended from Corded Ware ceramic traditions. The Abashevo culture played a significant role ... ref The Abashevo culture does not pertain to the Andronovo culture and genetically belongs to the circle of Central European cultures of the Fatyanovo culture type corded ware ceramics. ref Elena E ... steppe cultures as well to those of earliest Mycenae . ref J. P. Mallory, Abashevo Culture, Encyclopedia of Indo European Culture, Fitzroy Dearborn, 1997, p 1 ref The population of Sintashta derived ... 2007, p 146 ref It follows the Yamna culture and Balanovo culture ref L. Koryakova, A. Epimakhov ... a component of the Abashevo culture burial rite, ref Elena E. Kuz mina, The Origin of the Indo Iranians ... Fatyanovo culture. ref L. Koryakova, A. Epimakhov, The Urals and Western Siberia in the Bronze ... construction forming walls and roof. ref J. P. Mallory, Abashevo Culture, Encyclopedia of Indo European Culture, Fitzroy Dearborn, 1997, p 1 ref There is evidence of copper smelting, and the culture would seem connected to copper mining activities in the southern Urals. The Abashevo culture was an important center of metallurgy ref J. P. Mallory, Abashevo Culture, Encyclopedia of Indo European Culture, Fitzroy Dearborn, 1997, p 2 ref and stimulated the formation of Sintashta metallurgy ... of the Volosovo culture of the region were absorbed into the Abashevo populace, as corded impressed ... more details
. The burials bear a remarkable resemblance to those much further west in the Yamna culture , the Sredny Stog culture , the Catacomb culture and the Poltavkaculture , all of which are believed ...Image Andronovo culture.png thumb 325px Map of the approximate extent of the Afanasevo culture Or date November 2011 shown in green and the westerly Andronovo culture in orange The Afanasevo or Afanasievo culture , traditionally dated to 2500&ndash 2000 BC with human remains dated to 2874&ndash 2469 radiocarbon cal BC. The scientific dating evidence would tend to suggest that the Afanasievo culture is some 300 400 years older in date than indicated by conventional archaeological understanding. ref ... Basin, Southern Siberia, Russia. Radiocarbon 2009.1, 243 273 ref , Others estimates the culture to be as old ...&ved 0CGMQ6AEwBQ v onepage&q Afanasievo 20culture&f false ref It is an archaeological culture ... of presumably Proto Indo Europeans Indo European culture makes it an automatic candidate for being ... date April 2012 The burials bear a resemblance to those much further west in the Yamna culture , the Sredny Stog culture , the Catacomb culture , the Poltavkaculture and the Corded Ware Culture . The Afanasevo culture was succeeded by the Karasuk culture in the east. Spread It became known from excavations in the Minusinsk area of the Krasnoyarsk Krai , southern Siberia , but the culture was also ... of wild game. Culture The culture is mainly known from its inhumation s, with the deceased buried in conic ... westerly Andronovo culture is difficult to characterize. Ethnicity Out of 10 human male remains assigned ... also Andronovo culture Karasuk culture Sources H. P. Francfort, The Archeology of Protohistoric Central ... Afanasevo Culture title Encyclopedia of Indo European Culture publisher Fitzroy Dearborn publication ... Culture Category Bronze Age Category Chalcolithic Category Archaeology of Russia Category Archaeology ... Kultur es Cultura de Afan sievo eo Afanaseva kulturo fr Culture d Afanasievo it Cultura di Afanasevo ... more details
Image Corded Ware culture.png thumb Approximate culture extent c. 3200 2300 BC. Image IE5500BP.png thumb The Yamna culture in 4th millennium BC Europe. The Yamna culture lang uk , lang ru , Pit Grave Culture , from Russian language Russian Ukrainian language Ukrainian , pit is a chalcolithic late copper age early Bronze Age culture of the Southern Bug Dniester Ural river ... in English as Pit Grave Culture or Ochre Grave Culture . The culture was predominantly nomad ic, with some agriculture practiced near rivers and a few hillfort s. ref J. P. Mallory , Yamna Culture , Encyclopedia of Indo European Culture , Fitzroy Dearborn, 1997. ref The Yamna culture was preceded by the Sredny Stog culture , Khvalynsk culture and Dnieper Donets culture , while succeeded by the Catacomb culture and the Srubna culture . Characteristics Characteristic for the culture are the inhumation ... Iranians . ref cite book author Benjamin W Fortson title Indo European Language and Culture An Introduction ... by Trenozhkin A.I. associated with the Yamna culture. Spread and identity The Yamna culture is identified ... Sredny Stog culture , now that archaeological evidence of the culture and its migrations has been closely ... . Pavel Dolukhanov argues that the emergence of the Pit Grave culture represents a social development ... originated in the middle Volga based Khvalynsk culture and the middle Dnieper based Sredny Stog culture . In its western range, it is succeeded by the Catacomb culture in the east, by the Poltavkaculture and the Srubna culture . Artifacts center class graytable style text align center From the Hermitage ... reflist 2 See also commons category Yamna culture Kurgan Kurgan stelae Cucuteni Trypillian culture Vin a culture Beaker culture Category Indo European Category Archaeological cultures of Eastern Europe Category Encyclopedia of Indo European Culture Category Bronze Age Europe Category Copper Age ... Cultura yamna fa fr Culture Yamna it Cultura di Jamna lt Duobini kap kult ra hu Jamna ... more details
known chariots precededby Poltavkaculture , Abashevo culture followedby The Sintashta culture , also known as the Sintashta Petrovka culture ref name Koryakova 1998b Harvnb Koryakova 1998b . ref or Sintashta Arkaim culture , ref name Koryakova 1998a Harvnb Koryakova 1998a . ref is a Bronze Age archaeological culture of the northern Eurasian steppe on the borders of Eastern Europe and Central ...Infobox archaeological culture name Sintashta culture map mapalt altnames horizon region period Bronze ... known chariot s have been found in Sintashta burials, and the culture is considered a strong ... is unusual for a steppe culture. ref name Hanks & Linduff 2009 Harvnb Hanks Linduff 2009 . ref ... settlements, the culture was only recently distinguished from the Andronovo culture . ref name Koryakova ... Koryakova 1998b Origin The Sintashta culture emerged from the interaction of two antecedent cultures. Its immediate predecessor in the Ural Tobol steppe was the Poltavkaculture , an offshoot of the cattle herding Yamna culture Yamnaya horizon that moved east into the region between 2800 and 2600 ..., and Poltovka motifs are common on Sintashta pottery. Sintashta material culture also shows the influence of the late Abashevo culture , a collection of settlements in the forest steppe zone north ... culture was already marked by endemic intertribal warfare ref name Anthony 2007 pp. 383 384 Harvnb ... culture are thought to have spoken Proto Indo Iranian , the ancestor of the Indo Iranian languages ... in Vedic Sanskrit , with the funerary rituals of the Sintashta culture as revealed by archaeology ... culture exclusively Indo Iranian ethnicity. ref name Kuz mina 2007 p. 222 Harvnb Kuz mina 2007 p ... koryakova2 Korya.Sin.Ark.html title Sintashta Arkaim Culture first L. last Koryakova year 1998a ... Culture Late Bronze Age Indo Iranians in Central Asia first L. last Koryakova year 1998b publisher The Center ... of Central Asia de Sintashta Kultur fr Culture Sintachta hu Szintasta kult ra it Cultura di Sintashta ... more details
Culture of Celtic Europe and modern Celtic identity Celts Celtic art Ancient Celtic culture Celtic music Insular art Celtic music Gaelic cultureCulture of Ireland Culture of Scotland Culture of the Isle of Man Culture of Wales Culture of Cornwall Culture of Brittany See also Culture of the United Kingdom Culture of Europe disambig Category Celtic culture ... more details
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main Portal Contents Culture and the arts The following Wikipedia Outlines Wikipedia Outline is provided as an overview and content index to culture TOC limit limit 2 Nature of culture Main article Culture ... lifestyle &ndash Society &ndash Elements of culture The arts &ndash Fine arts Gastronomy Outline of cooking ... Outline of religion Religion &ndash Tradition &ndash Types of cultures Organizational culture &ndash Cultures by aspect Bicycle culture &ndash a culture that supports, encourages, and has high bicycle usage Consumer culture &ndash a society based on consumerism High context culture &ndash a culture with the tendency use high context messages, resulting in catering towards in groups Horse culture ... context culture &ndash culture with a tendency not to cater towards in groups Remix culture &ndash a society which allows and encourages derivative work s Participatory culture &ndash a culture in which ... &ndash Permission culture &ndash a society in which copyright restrictions are pervasive and enforced ... culture &ndash a community that lacks major signs of economic development or modernity Cultural cross sections Children s culture &ndash cultural phenomena pertaining to children Children s street culture &ndash cumulative culture created by young children Coffee culture &ndash social atmosphere ... lubricant &ndash Culture of capitalism &ndash the lifestyle of the people living within a capitalist ... culture &ndash refers to a wide range of elements in non mainstream society, such as grassroots political and social activism, independent music, art, and film Dominant culture &ndash the established language, religion, behavior, values, rituals, and social customs of a society Drinking culture &ndash the customs and practices of people who drink alcoholic beverages Folk culture &ndash traditional culture traditional cultural traits of a community Low culture &ndash High culture &ndash Official culture &ndash Political culture &ndash Civic political culture &ndash Popular culture &ndash totality ... more details
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orphan date March 2010 Unreferenced date March 2009 Tangible culture is culture that is tangible or touchable, the opposite of intangible culture . DEFAULTSORT Tangible Culture Category Traditions Category Cultural anthropology culture stub ... more details
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saved book title Culture subtitle cover image Baduy erin014 25.jpg cover color Culture Main article Culture History Cultural history Cultures of the world Cultural region Culture by region Basic concepts Bandwagon effect Counterculture Cross cultural communication Cultural bias Cultural dissonance Sociocultural evolution Cultural evolution Cultural imperialism Culture theory Cultural universal Culture war Demographics Social fact Emotions and culture Ethnic group Ethnocentrism Folk culture Low culture High culture Intercultural competence Organizational culture Popular culture Subculture Urban culture Category Wikipedia books on cultureCulture ... more details