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There are different ways of looking at culture, a

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There are different ways of looking at culture, and these may involve methodological differences, each of which may be applied to the same culture. "Culture" looked at as an intrinsic and universal aspect of all social life would then discern differences in each society based on variations in core values, institutions, and behaviors. Viewing culture as distinct and explicit practice reflects each culture as essentially distinct, manifested in different explicit institutions, values, and behaviors. Within every culture there are also subcultures, groupings of people with slightly different cultural roots who conform on one level to the norms of the larger society and on another place a higher value on the norms of their particular group. In the film A Stranger Among Us (1992), there is an explicit emanation of the meaning of culture, the value of a subculture, and the conflicts that can develop between the two. Even though a subculture is subsumed under the larger culture, there are likely to be conflicting values which can create strains on both sides, which is precisely what happens in this film.

Consider first the meaning of culture and how it shapes our lives. Culture is defined as the set of beliefs, values, behavior, and material objects constituting a people's way of life. Culture and society are terms often used interchangeably, but culture actually refers to a shared way of life or social heritage, while society refers to people interacting within a limited

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as a dual meaning. On the one hand, Emily becomes a stranger in this community, and her values and theirs are very different and inevitably lead to conflict. She openly expresses her contempt for some of the rules by which these people live, for she does not take an objective view at all and intrudes herself where she is not wanted. The second meaning from the title is more frightening to these people--there may be one of them who is a killer, and such a person would be a stranger among them, a stranger because he has failed, a stranger because he is not living up to the norms by which they have all lived their entire lives. Such a person would be known to them, but he would be a stranger just the same. Such a stranger is much more dangerous than this woman who is only visiting, for his failure would test the resolve of everyone else and make them worry that their way of life was not controlling them all as they had hoped. The police department is a bureaucracy and so has a system that exists within a larger system, the two representing a mixture of norms and values to control and direct the activities of all members of the department. A police department at the macrolevel is a bureaucracy, and Max Weber offered a comprehe
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Some common words found in the essay are:
Brooklyn Hasidic, , Max Weber, Christian Jewish, Emily Eden, Wall Silence, Sidney Lumet, outside culture, police department, hasidic community, Basic Books, Buena Vista, outside culture threat, norms values, larger culture, jewish community, meaning culture, culture threat, social structure, community subculture, person stranger stranger,
Approximate Word count = 1662
Approximate Pages = 7 (250 words per page)

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