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Culture
A system of knowledge, beliefs, patterns of behavior, artifacts, and institutions that are created, learned, shared, and contested by a group of people.
Enculturation
The process of learning culture.
Norms
Ideas or rules about how people should behave in particular situations or toward certain other people.
Values
Fundamental beliefs about what is important, what makes a good life, and what is true, right, and beautiful.
Symbol
Anything that represents something else.
Mental maps of reality
Cultural classifications of what kinds of people and things exist, and the assignment of meaning to those classifications.
Cultural relativism
Understanding a group’s beliefs and practices within their own cultural context, without making judgments.
Cultural appropriation
The unwanted taking of cultural practices or knowledge from one group by another, more dominant group.
Unilineal cultural evolution
The theory proposed by nineteenth-century anthropologists that all cultures naturally evolve through the same sequence of stages from simple to complex.
Historical particularism
The idea, attributed to Franz Boas, that cultures develop in specific ways because of their unique histories.
Society
The focus of early British anthropological research whose structure and function could be isolated and studied scientifically.
Structural functionalism
A conceptual framework positing that each element of society serves a particular function to keep the entire system in equilibrium.
Interpretivist approach
A conceptual framework that sees culture primarily as a symbolic system of deep meaning.
Thick description
A research strategy that combines detailed description of cultural activity with an analysis of the layers of deep cultural meaning in which those activities are embedded.
Power
The ability or potential to bring about change through action or influence.
Stratification
The uneven distribution of resources and privileges among members of a group or culture.
Hegemony
The ability of a dominant group to create consent and agreement within a population without the use or threat of force.
Agency
The potential power of individuals and groups to contest cultural norms, values, mental maps of reality, symbols, institutions, and structures of power.
Epigenetics
An area of study in the field of genetics exploring how environmental factors directly affect the expression of genes during one’s lifetime.
Human microbiome
The complete collection of microorganisms in the human body’s ecosystem.