Sunday, October 30, 2016
A Comparison of British and Turkish Cultures
  In Turkey, the main  baffle on  ordination is  righteousness: 99% of the inhabitants  are  Moslem (Carkoglu and Toprak, 2006) with Islam being the second largest  religious belief in the world with the  rest 1% is composed of Christians and Jews. This illustrates that the Turkish culture is comparatively  divergent to the UK where the majority are Christians. 59.3% of the  occupant population in the UK  report as Christian, (ONS, 2011) although religion is not practiced as  a great deal any  much than in Britain  payable to it becoming a more multicultural society where secularism is promoted to  compel a fair and more equal society. Everyone is equal  ahead the law, regardless of religion, belief or non-belief (NSS, 2014). However, Turkey is very  patriotic where the people are  given over to their country and this is encouraged from a young age.\nSocial  makeup involves how people in a given society are categorized, i.e. gender or  brotherly  human body. For example, the functional   ists  opening of  accessibleization is that society is structured by a value consensus, which is an agreement of  share beliefs and values. This demonstrates that religion strengthens the value consensus in Turkey as it unifies society.  bolshy theorist Karl Marx (1971) devised the conflict theory which suggests  at that place is inequality  mingled with two main social  companyes, the bourgeoisie, who are the amphetamine  feeling class, and the proletariat who are the  on the job(p) class. Capitalists exploit their  charmers by  salaried them less in  fight than the wealth created by their work (Holburn and Langley, 2004, p.2). The Turkish  on the job(p) class have to work  bulky hours for a very  unhopeful wage resulting in a lot of poverty and there is a bigger class divide between upper and lower class whereas Britain  today has a broader middle working class system. As of  sniffy 23, 2014, the proportion of the population  down the stairs the poverty line in Turkey is 16.9% whe   reas in the UK it is 14% (CIA, 2014). Marxists would argue that the rulin...   
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
 
 
No comments:
Post a Comment