The notion of culture means different things to different people. Broadly, we can say that, two types of meaning are prevalent. Firstly, there is the popular understanding and usage of the term to imply habits, customs and legacies, which have a folkloristic feature to them; like traditional dances and music, traditional clothes and other features of the given group, which have exotic characteristics, particularly attractive to voyeuristic minds and tourists. Typically, such features generally find place and are linked more to museums than living or current representations of life. They are indeed selected exoticisms; reified habits and artefacts; the designation of culture to mean fossilized and time-warped institutions and cultural attributes. These selected exotica become ways of inventing “the other”. This “street-level” understanding of the notion is conceptually restrictive and it, as it were, projects “the trivial side-show as the main show.”