symbols are cultural representations of reality.
Every culture has its own set of symbols associated with different experiences
and perceptions. Thus, as a representation, a symbol's meaning is neither
instinctive nor automatic. The culture's members must interpret and over time
reinterpret the symbol.
Symbols occur in different forms: verbal or nonverbal, written or
unwritten. They can be anything that conveys a meaning, such as words on the
page, drawings, pictures, and gestures. Clothing, homes, cars, and other consumer
items are symbols that imply a certain level of social status.
Perhaps the most powerful of all human symbols is language—a
system of verbal and sometimes written representations that are culturally
specific and convey meaning about the world. In the 1930s,Edward Sapir and Benjamin
Lee Whorf proposed that languages influence perceptions. While this
Sapir‐Whorf hypothesis—also called the linguistic
relativity hypothesis—is controversial, it legitimately suggests that a
person will more likely perceive differences when he or she possesses words or
concepts to describe the differences.
Language is an important source of continuity and identity in a
culture. Some groups, such as the French‐speaking residents of
Quebec in Canada, refuse to speak English, which is Canada's primary language,
for fear of losing their cultural identity although both English and French are
Canada's official languages. In the United States, immigrants provide much
resistance to making English the official national language.
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