Cultural Heritage Maintaining the ...
Cultural Heritage Maintaining the individual's mind of cultural heritage is a muscular argument for LM. This argument tread on the heels ofs directly from the previous sections, where it was discussed that language is an important factor in the preservation of assemblage integrity, and a clear marker of ethnicity and collection identity. It has also been argued that language is a robust carrier of a group's cultural heritage. The importance of language in communicating and preserving agriculture will be discussed in detail in this section. Gunew (1994) neared two definitions of the season culture. One is the sociological or anthropological definition, which defines tillage as "every aspect of life" (p 2) It is an inclusive notion of the various proper states of everyday life, for example, subsistence religion, and sport. As discussed in the section forward Group Integrity, Isajiw's (1980) definition of ethnicity includes hints to a group's cultural traits, single of these traits being language. Williams (1981) also includes language as a specific cultural activity. He means that one definition of cultivation is "the informing spirit of a whole way of life, which is manifest athwart the whole range of social activities still is most evident in 'specifically cultural activities'-a language, methods of art, kinds of intellectual work" (p 11) The other meaning of tillage put forward by Gunew is the notion of civilization as involving the arts. This notion includes heritage and tradition "or what a agriculture wishes to preserve as manifestations of its imaginative and intellectual life" (p 2) The idea of preserving any cultural traits is also place in Williams's preferred definition, which papal courts culture as the "signifying order through which necessarily (though among other means) a social order is communicated, reproduc experienced and explored" (p 13) The intimation to "communication" in Williams's definition clearly highlights the importance of language as a medium for tillage
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