Cultural Anthropology: Exam 1

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Last updated 4:10 PM on 10/2/23
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221 Terms

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Anthropology

The study of humans

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What are the four fields of Anthropology?

Biological, Cultural, Archaeology, Linguistic

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Biological Anthropology

the study of humans from a biological perspective, particularly focused on human evolution

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Cultural Anthropology

the study of people's communities, behaviors, beliefs, and institutions, including how people make meaning as they live, work, and play together

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Archaeology

examines the past history of cultures through their material remains

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Linguistic Anthropology

the study of language and the relationship between language and culture

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Fieldwork

the term anthropologists use for on-location research

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participant observation

Heart of Fieldwork

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a key anthropological research strategy involving both participation in and observation of the daily life of the people being studied

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Signified

The mental concept associated with the word

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Comparative Approach

compares society with society; tradition with tradition &identifies similarities and differences

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cultural relativism

idea that each culture is unique and distinctive but no one culture is superior

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Ethnocentrism

belief that one's culture represents the best way to do things

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Culture

refers to the human behavior, symbols, beliefs, ideas, and the material objects humans. "way of life" of a people

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...

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object of knowledge; condition of human identity and social relations.

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E.B. Tylor

talked about culture as a complex whole which includes knowledge, belief, art, morals, law, custom, and any other capabilities and habits acquired by man as a member of society

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What are aspects of American Culture?

Friendly, nice, working

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Evolutionary Psychology

the study of the evolution of behavior and the mind, using principles of natural selection

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Cultural Evolution

conceptualized universal stages of development through which all societies have progressed... simple societies become more complex

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CHANGE THROUGH LEARNED BEHAVIORS

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Cultural Ecology

Geographic approach that emphasizes human-environment relationships.

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Leslie White and Julian Steward (Cultural Ecology)

Neoevolutionism

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anthropologists who analyzed how environment, technology, and energy requirements led to the evolution of societies

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Ideology

a system of ideas and ideals, especially one that forms the basis of economic or political theory and policy.

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Armchair Anthropology

Anthropology through the study of secondhand reports from people such as travelers and missionaries.

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Anthropocene

refers to the period in which human cultural behavior had significant impact on the ecology and geology of the earth

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Ethnography

translation of fieldwork observations into a written narrative form

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Franz Boas

father of modern American anthropology; argued for cultural relativism and historical particularism

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cultural relativism

idea that each culture is unique and distinctive but no one culture is superior

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Historical Particularism

The idea, attributed to Franz Boas, that cultures develop in specific ways because of their unique histories.

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Bronislaw Malinowski

British anthropologist (born in Poland) who introduced the technique of the participant observer (1884-1942)

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"Father of fieldwork... functionalism in anthropology"

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Margaret Mead

United States anthropologist noted for her claims about adolescence and sexual behavior in Polynesian cultures (1901-1978)

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What are the 5 Ethnographic methods?

  1. Participant observation

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  1. Individual/Expert/Group interviews

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  1. Physical Traces/Behavioral mapping

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  1. Transect walks

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  1. Historical and archival documents

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Individual/Expert/Group Interviews

Questions you'd ask for this ethnographic method:

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Who to talk to?

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What to listen for?

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When to interview?

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Where?

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Physical trace maps

Ethnographic method

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what items in a local mark the lingering presence of people who move through that space? (images& sounds, too)

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Behavioral mapping

Ethnographic method

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recording people and their activities in time & space. Who's there and why; who's not? What are they doing?

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Transect walks

Ethnographic method

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a local "expert" (community members, etc.) guides you through a location; possible collaborative dimension. Answers the question, "what am I seeing here?"

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Types of ritual (4)

Rites of Passage

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Rites of Intensification

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Rites of Inversion

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Hortatory Rituals

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Rites of passage

occurs in relation to life-cycle events and organize the passage of individuals from one state/identity into another

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Rites of Intensification

(Cyclic events) Perform/display community values and key symbols

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Rites of Inversion

reversals of everyday moral and political orders; specially marked moments when people break, or 'humorously play with,' their own cultural rules

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hortatory rituals

Rituals that consist of exhortations to the supernatural to perform some act

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Examples of Rites of Passage

Childhood into adulthood

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Driving

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Sweet 16

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Graduation

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Marriage

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Death

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Examples of Rites of Intensification

Thanksgiving

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Church

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Christmas

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Fourth of July

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Birthdays

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Examples of Rites of Inversion

Halloween

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April Fools

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Powderpuff

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Animistic

The belief that inanimate objects have lifelike qualities, such as thoughts, wishes, feelings, and intentions

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Shamanism

enactment of a convincing, theatrical-style performance, before an audience that needs to be convinced; focus on efficacy—how well the rite works

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imagistic

episodes of intense physical experience (pain, fear)

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Lithurgy

doing things in the correct sequence, in a setting where everyone participates.

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Doctrinal

sacred/secular instruction; requires "semantic memory"

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Totemism

the belief that people are related to particular animals, plants, or natural objects by virtue of descent from common ancestral spirits

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Morpheme

in a language, the smallest unit that carries meaning; may be a word or a part of a word (such as a prefix)

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Phoneme

in language, the smallest distinctive sound unit

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Grammar

the complete description of a language

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Ethnosemantics

the study of the meaning of words, phrases, and sentences in particular cultural contexts

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linguistic relativity

all languages are equally complex and share the same functions and basic structures

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Linguistic imperialism

the transfer of a dominant language to other people

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Gender

Culture-specific sets of behavioral, ideological, and socially constructed meanings for understand biology

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Sexuality

erotic desires & practices, along a spectrum

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Gender roles

tasks and activities that a culture assigns to sexes. Must be viewed in relation to each other, because they are mutually informing

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Sex

physical differentiation based on anatomy (genitalia) and secondary sex characteristics

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Age grade

age-related status; phases of life/cycles, categories: infancy, childhood, adolescence, young adulthood, middle and old age. Recognized in all societies, but the names, lengths, perceived attributes, and expected behavior of those stages varies among societies

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Age sets

generations or cohorts (social group, consisting of people of similar age), posits a common identity maintain over a prolonged period, and together pass through a series of age-related statuses. Ex. Baby boomers. Millennials, Gen Z

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Gender stratification

the unequal distribution of rewards (socially valued resources, power, prestige, and personal freedom) between men and women reflecting their different positions in the social hierarchy

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Self

living organisms maintaining homeostasis in relation to englobing environment

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Social self

(face) asserted, maintained, and challenged in relation to others; requires aligning bodily functions with social expectations ("I'm not myself today")

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Person

bearer of rights and obligations, belonging to a social collective