Chapter 4: Local Culture, Popular Culture, and Cultural Landscape

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44 Terms

1
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Hutterites differ from the Amish in that they . . .

use technology

2
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The only Old Order Anabaptist group who live communally rather than in family farmsteads are the . . .

Hutterites

3
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Reflecting its origins and cultural tradition, Hutterite leaders speak . . .

Archaic German

4
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Over 425 Hutterite communities exist in each of the following states and provinces except:

arkansas

5
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. . . culture is conceived as small, incorporating a homogeneous population, typically rural and cohesive in cultural traits

Folk

6
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The . . . of a group of people includes the things they construct

material culture

7
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Which is an example of a non-material aspect of culture?

customs

8
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A group of people in a particular place who see themselves as a community and who share experiences, customs, and traits are referred to as a . . .

local culture

9
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In terms of popular culture, cities like Paris, New York, and Milan are referred to as . . .

the hearth

10
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The fact that trends in popular culture (e.g. fashion) proceed from large global centers (Milan, Paris, New York) through a series of progressively smaller cities is an example of . . .

hierarchical diffusion

11
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The changes in local culture brought about by the onslaught of popular culture tend to disrupt . . .

cultural landscapes

12
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Government efforts to discourage native practice and languages in the United States and Canada were attempts to . . . native groups

assimilate

13
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Efforts to conserve local cultures often focus on the local . . .

customs

14
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Buying a Native American styled dream catcher at a Wal-Mart store would possibly be an example of . . .

cultural appropriation

15
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Anabaptist groups have tried to restrict contact with the outside world by . . .

not letting in technology and cellphones

16
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"Little Sweeden" in Lindsborg, Kansas is a good example of . . .

neolocalism

17
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Rural local cultures are often dependent on a single economic activity. Customs, beliefs, and artifacts are often intimately bound up with the economic activities. For example, the customs of the Plains Indians in early nineteenth-century North America focused on . . .

bison hunting

18
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The Makah of Washington State reinstituted . . . as a means of solidifying their culture and reconnecting with their past

whaling with guns

19
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In 2000, there were over 60 Hutterite Colonies in . . .

Canada - Alberta and Manitoba

20
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According to the text, the Makah whalers used a 50-caliber rifle to kill the gray whale they hunted because . . .

it was more humane

21
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The building of a sense of community identity around the idea of "Swedish-ness" in Lindsborg, Kansas is an example of . . .

neolocalism

22
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Urban local cultures as in Brooklyn, New York and North End Boston, Massachusetts are seen as positive examples of . . . ., places of cultural persistence

ethnic neighborhoods

23
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Recently, Puerto Ricans living in Spanish Harlem in New York feel themselves challenged by the influx of Mexican immigrants to the neighborhood. This would be an example of the threat of . . . to an ethnic neighborhood

invasion and succession and extinction (or being overrun)

24
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One of the challenges to urban ethnic neighborhoods mentioned in the text is . . .

migration of members of popular culture, local culture, or ethnic groups

25
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Cultural appropriation for purposes of profit (e.g., naming a beer for a Lakota chief) is referred to as an example of . . .

commodification

26
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The commodification process of a local custom or artifact often leads to the development of an image of "authenticity" which amounts to an example of . . .

stereotype

27
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Branson, Missouri capitalizes on local culture by presenting it as . . . for tourist consumption

Ozark culture

28
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The "lost city" located in Sun City, South Africa is a good example of . . .

modification of nature - try to recreate something

29
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In 1830 there were over 290 local breweries in Ireland. The number declined to less than 10 in 1980. Today, Irish beer and prefabricated Irish pubs are marketed to the world by the global brewing corporation . . .

Guinness

30
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The Irish Pub Co. has designed pubs in all of the following countries except . . .

Brazil

31
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Geographer David Harvey refers to the increasing speed by which innovations in popular culture diffuse as . . .

time-space compression

32
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The growth in the size of the audience of Phish in its college band days was the result of . . .

first contagious, then hierarchal

33
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MC Solaar is to France as Jovanotti is to . . .

Italy

34
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Globalized popular culture can be picked up and reproduced by people in the context of their local culture. This is referred to as . . .

Reterritorialization

35
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Jovanotti "reterritorialized" hip hop to reflect the local cultural context of . . .

Italy

36
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Local "extreme sports," such as skateboarding, rapidly spread by being featured in . . .

Video games and TV

37
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The text focuses on one local culture which is conspicuous in its attempts to lessen the influence of foreign popular culture by controlling its cultural media outlets and industries. It is . . .

France

38
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The visible imprint of human activity on the landscape is known as . . .

cultural, natural, or built environment

39
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The only country in Africa with a building over 700 feet tall is . . .

South Africa

40
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Japan is a hearth of global popular culture that influences North America with . . .

children's television and electronic games and anime

41
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The Dave Matthews Band established a . . . in Charlottesville, Virginia and gained popularity through . . . among college towns

hearth; hierarchical diffusion

42
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According to E. Relph, the term which best captures the quality of the American landscape which is associated with the spread of popular culture is . . .

placelessness

43
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Which is not an aspect of cultural landscape convergence?

regional architectural styles

44
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Fred Kniffen's map of folk-housing regions does not show the eastward diffusion of a housing style that can be found almost everywhere today. It is the . . .

ranch style