What is Culture?
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A proposito di questo titolo
What is culture, really? Is it food, clothing, music, beliefs — or something deeper? In this conversation, host Geoff Lawton and the panel explore culture through the lens of permaculture. From local food systems and ethics to migration, religion, consumerism and identity, the discussion keeps circling back to one core idea: culture emerges from place. When culture is disconnected from land, ecology, and local production, it becomes fragile, conflicted, and easy to manipulate. But when it’s rooted in care for the Earth and each other, culture becomes resilient and worth passing on.
Watch the video episode here.
Key Takeaways:
00:00–02:00: Culture is not a trend or an identity label. It grows out of how people live with land, food, and each other over time.
01:30–03:00: Agriculture and food systems sit at the foundation of every culture. Change the way food is grown, and culture changes with it.
03:30–07:30: Belief systems and religion have historically provided shared ethics that guide behaviour, responsibility, and community life.
07:30–10:30: Ethics are the invisible structure beneath culture. They shape how societies treat land, food, and one another.
14:30–16:00: Culture is deeply shaped by place — climate, soil, resources, and what can be grown locally.
17:00–19:30: Modern consumer culture disconnects people from land and food, replacing relationship with convenience and consumption.
21:00–23:30: Local food systems create resilience and diversity, while centralized systems lead to sameness and cultural loss.
22:30–24:00: When landscapes become homogenized, cultures begin to homogenize as well. Shopping malls and global supply chains are symptoms of this shift.
26:30–28:30: Understanding other cultures requires context. Practices make sense when viewed through climate, history, and local conditions rather than judgment.
27:30–30:30: Religion, culture, and ethics often overlap, functioning as systems that organise behaviour and shared responsibility.
34:00–37:00: Culture is not static. It evolves — and can either degrade through extraction or regenerate through care and design.
40:30–43:30: Permaculture provides a framework for consciously designing culture using ethics, ecology, and cooperation.
43:30–46:00: The ethics of earth care, people care, and returning surplus offer a foundation for rebuilding resilient, place-based cultures.
46:00–48:00 (end): A regenerative future depends on rebuilding culture from the ground up, starting with soil, food, and ethical responsibility.