study!!! yEEE
wealth
the total valuee of what someone owns, minus any debt
social movement
collective group actions in response to uneven development, inequality, and injustice that seek to build institutional networks to transform cultural patterns and government policies.
ways humans construct kinship groups:
genealogical descent marriage
core countries
industrialized former colonial sites that dominate the world economic system
arranged marriage
marriage orchestrated by the families of the involved parties - Asia, Pacific, Middle East and Africa
exogamy
marriage to someone outside the kinship group
semiperiphery countries
nations ranking in between core and periphery countries, with some attributes of the core countries but with less of a central role in the global economy
The Anthropology of Art
- Distinction between fine art and popular art - Existence of a universal art - Assumption of quality between Western art and what is referred to as Primitive art
Arts and culture
- Not all cultures have the same perceptions of beauty, imagination, skill, and style. - Western culture- influenced by what was once called "Primitive art". ex: Venus de' Medici, Venus- Willendorf, Samoan tattoo, Picasso -African masks, Lascaux caves
Paganism
- Origin: multiple sources - followers: 1 mil - deity: mainly polytheistic sacred texts: multiple with diverse origins headquarters: none Public witches and other Pagans. 1st druid revivals, freemasonry occultism
Judaism(FINAL)
- Original of 3 Abrahamic faiths. - Originated in Middle East 3500 yrs ago. - Found by Moses: track back to Abraham - Covenant with 1 one god. Religious text: TALMUD (oral laws) <- (FINAL...know what the jewish text is called) - Mishnah: original oral law - Gemara: record of Rabbinic discussions (FINAL) TORAH (1st part of Jewish text contains first 5 books of Moses: Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers & Deuteronomy)
Holy Days (Holy Jewish Days)
- Sabbath - Hanukkah: Festival of lights - Rosh Hashanah: Jewish New Year - Sukkot: remembers years spent in desert to promised land - Purim: celebrates defeat Haman - Pesach: escape Egyptian captivity - Shavuot: Moses on Mt. Sinai - Yom Kippur: High Holy day, sacred and solemn. - Simchat Torah: celebrates Torah
Jainism
- The Universe and everything is eternal. - Nothing was created nor will be destroyed-just always was. - Universe consists of 3 realms: (Heavens, Earthly realms, Hells) - Emphasize Nonviolence & Asceticism - Began in 6th cent. B.C. 24 spiritual leaders- "Ford-makers" or "Tirthankara's" Ritual centers around sacred images and mantras. ex: Mahavira: 1200 A.D.: Supreme God
The significance of art
- expression of human life - creativity is cultural - songs, dances, paintings, architecture, clothing, games, and food.
Visual Anthropology
- field of anthropology that explores the production, circulation, and consumption of visual images, focusing on the power of visual representation to influence cultural and cultural identity - In 1888, National Geographic successfully blended art, journalism photography
Sexology
-19th century -study of sexuality, played role in the creation of heterosexuality as the dominant ideal.
Deities
1) 1st. God Creator of all living things Helps with creation, upkeep & destruction 2) Destroyer then recreates. 3) Preserver of the Universe.
Rites of Passage (Arnold Gennep) (FINAL)
1) A category of ritual that enacts a change of status from one life stage to another, either for an individual or a group. 2) Religious rites of passage are life-transition rituals marking moments of intense change, such as birth, coming of age, marriage, and death. Ex: Sacred Thread Ceremony (the 8 YEAR OLD) Hinduism and Jain Sanskar
From chiefdom to kingdom
1) A centralized political organization with the king as the paramount leader. 2) In Tonga, mid-19th century,the quest for land, led to warfare, and trade with Europe, transformed system from Chiefdom into a Kingdom. ex: First King of Tonga Taufa'ahau - 1845 ex: tonga's royal family
African Creation Myths
1) Ashanti - Anansi/Spider Woman 2) Egypt - Seb - God of Time and Earth 3) Yoruba - Obatala - First to make earth for humans to live
Oceania Creation Myths
1) Hindu - Ganesha/ Wealth and Knowledge 2) Australia - Aborigines/ Rainbow Serpent 3) New Zealant - Maori - God of Wind
Asian Creation Myths
1) Japan - Izunami and Izunagi, Chaos to Matter to Humans 2) China - Pangu creates the universe and Yin and Yang
ranked society lecture
1. Positions of high prestige- as a chief- are largely inherited. Social rank is set regardless of skills, wisdom, or efforts of members in group. 2. Chief does not accumulate great wealth but maintains high prestige. Group members offer gifts or tribute to the chief, but are not kept. - They practice Redistribution
tribute serves as
1. Serves mechanism for dispense goods. 2. Way to affirm political power of chief & value of solidarity among people
identities of religion
1.Belief in powers or deities - abilities not of the natural world not be measured by scientific tools. 2. Myths / stories - reflect purpose of life, origins, and humans' place in the universe. 3. Rituals - reinforce, recall, instill, and explore beliefs. 4. Symbols - represent key aspects 5. Specialists - assist believer to understand life 6. Organization and institutions - preserve, explore, teach, and implement beliefs 6. A community of believers
industrial revolution
18th and 19th century shfit from agriculture and artisanal skill craft to machine-based manufacturing. G.B. led the way and relied heavily on raw materials, cheap labor and open markets of the colonies.
Jainism
7 levels of heaven 1) Top level: Realm of Jains-reserved for liberated souls. 2) Earthly realm: Realm of Gods" "Continent of the Jambudnoa" Rose-Apple Tree" 3) Divided into 7 regions by 6 mountain ranges- with deliverance & religious merit is possible in 3 of these regions: 4) India in the South 5) Airavat in the North 6) Mahavideha in the Middle 7) Hell: 8 levels - get colder as they go down.
Ethnohistory
A field study for reconstructing & interpreting the history of indigenous peoples from their point of view as well as the points of view of the ethnohistorians
GHOST INVOCATION
A living man- considered as Elder calls forth the wrath of ancestor gods against sinner. ex: Lugbara, Uganda: believe that ancestors will afflict with illness any living kin who upset them by endangering well-being of community
tribute
A non-standardized currency culture. Tribal chiefs are given a portion of food & other goods by those in the community group then said goods are given back by the chief to the group
Origin myth (FINAL)
A story told about the founding and history of a particular group to reinforce a sense of common ancestry (identity) This is how ethnic identity is taught & reinforced.
Pastoralism (true <- know this definition... name a group that is pastoralist..starts with a m)
A strategy for food production involving the domestication and herding of animals. goats, sheep pigs may be raised to support family.
ANIMATISM
Belief that all things are endowed with spirit form oressence- an impersonal spiritual force that exists & manifest itself in people, animals or inanimate objects. Success, good fortune are signs of access to impersonal force & failure is sign of absence.
Ruth Benedict and Margaret Mead <- teacher favorite: also studied in Japan (Boa's students):
Benedict wrote Patterns of Culture and The Chrysanthemum and the Sword: explored the ways in which cultural traits and entire cultures are uniquely patted and integrated Mead: research in Samoa, Bali, and Papua New Guinea. he attention to enculturation and its powerful effects on cultural patterns and personality types: Coming of Age in Samoa: explored the seeming sexual freedom and experimentation of young Samoan woman and compared it with the repressed sexuality of young women in the US. suggesting the powerful role of enculturation in shaping behavior.
Homo erectus
Between 1.8 mya - 300,000yBP - found in Africa, Asia and Europe - larger than the pervious people and longer legs and shorter arms (before it was shorter legs): shows they are fully developed bipedialism. - first ancestor to migrate out of Africa - turned to cultural innovations to build adaptive strategies as they moved out of Africa - found bones of hippos, baboons, elephants indicates enchanted use of tools of throwing and thrusting (spears) a well as chopping, cutting and scraping - Acheulian stone tools -brain size increase because of protein - increased tool for food processing and preparation, from cutting to cooking, led to a reduction in the size of teeth, jaws and face - the homo erectus site at Zhoukoudian outside Beijing, China reveals the controlled use of fire. - burned remnants of bones, stone tools, plants, charcoal and ash indicate that homo erectus individuals were manipulating and controlling their environment with fire. - successfully colonized Africa, Asia and Europe with sites found in Spain and Italy.
Homo habilis
Between 2.5 & 1.8 mya. - lived in southern and eastern africa: same geographic distribution as the Australopithecines -increased cranial capacity, presumably greater mental capacity, and increased use of told. stone tools are more common here. better tools allowed more efficient processing of meat and higher protein intake. - even though the homo habilis were bipedal, the habilis did not share the efficient walking stride of later homo erectus and homo sapiens
HINDU: World Turtle: Creation of the Earth (FINAL...begins with little I)
Body of the turtle as the container or the universe itself. The earth is actually the Turtle's lower shell while the atmosphere is its body. The upper shell is what houses the heavenly realm. Within Hinduism, The Turtle is called KURMA (aka: Cosmic Turtle, Divine Turtle, World-bearing Turtle)
PROPHET
Emerge when religious image of social order fails to match daily experience of people. Will then create a new religious idea or call for purification or existing practices. ex: Moses
Early archaic Homo sapiens (Neandertals)
Emerged as early as 350,000yBP
Caste system in India
Hindu religious texts, rituals, and beliefs divide population into four Varna: castes. Each caste is associated with particular occupations and ranked according to its purity in Hindu ritual practices. 1) Brahmin: scholars, spiritual leaders 2) Ksyatriyas: soldiers, rulers 3) Vaisyas: agricultural workers, merchants 4) Shudras: laborers, artisans 5) Dalits: lowest caste, literally means: broken people- "Untouchables". Polluting work- cleaning toilets, collect garbage, tanning leather. Contaminate if touched.
Furs
North America, fur trade in beaver pelts, pulled continent into global economy. European trappers established trading relationships with Native Americans: furs-guns, metal tools, textiles.
Aesthetic experience
Perception through the human senses lec: 1. Western art traditions value of art 2. concept of aesthetics beauty, creativity, innovation
hypodescent
Sometimes known as the "one drop rule"- the assignment of children of racially 'mixed' union to the subordinate group. Sanctioned by the United States Supreme Court- began during slavery. In 1982 a court case to determine the listing of an individual born in 1977 in the South as being 'colored' but looked 'white'. All based on the % of black ancestry
Natural Selection
The evolutionary process by which some organisms, with features that enable them to adapt to the environment, preferentially survive and reproduce, thereby increasing the frequency of those features in the population "survival of the fitter" occurs when individuals within a pop. have certain characteristics that provide an advantage that enables them to survive and reproduce at a higher rate than others in the pop.
anthropologist toolkit (FINAL) <- true
all the equipment needed to conduct research: notebook, pens, camera, voice recorder, cell phone, watch, dictionary, identification
lexicon
all the words for names, ideas, and events that make up a language's dictionary
Age Sets (age-grade)
an association of people of more or less similar age who are given specific social functions.
Melanesians: Mana
as a force inherent in all objects- not physical itself but can show itself physically. ex: Warriors Amulet
unilinear descent
both matrilineal and patrilineal pattern reflect this because they build kinship groups through either one line or the other Descent that establishes group membership exclusively through either mother or fathers line. Common in non-Western societies. Child is assigned at birth to either mother or father group.
Caste system in India
carefully described Example of caste: Hindus. Complex system reflects The influences of religion, social and economic relations, nations experience with Colonialism & Globalization.
rite of passage
category of ritual that enacts a change of status from one life stage to another, either for an individual or a group
caste
closed system of stratification in a society system of stratification by organizing members of a culture into hierarchically ranked groups with unequal access to the rewards and privileges of society.
Franz Boas (said)
conducted fieldwork among the Kwakiutl people of the Pacific Northwest of US and Canada. believed in historical particularism - also turned to the idea of diffusion: borrowing of cultural traits and patterns from other cultures to explain apparent similarities -Participant Observation -Salvage Ethnography -Historical Particularism
economy
cultural adaptation to the environment that enables a group of humans to use the available resources to satisfy their needs and to thrive Most basic level: economy : a set of ideas, activities, and technologies that enable a group of humans to use the available land, resources, and labor for basic needs.
ethnology
cultural anthropologists: analyze and comparison of ethnographic data across cultures: look beyond specific local realities to see more general patterns of human behavior and to explore how local experiences intersect with global dynamics
mental maps of reality
cultural classifications of what kinds of people and things exist and the assignment of meaning to those classifications. these are maps that humans construct what kinds of people and what kinds of things exist. maps are to navigate our experience and organize all the data that comes our way. 1) classify reality (ex: subdivided of kingdom: phylum, class, order, family, genus, and species. time: millennia, centuries, decades, years, seasons, months, weeks hours, morning, etc 2) assign meaning to what has been classified (ex: we classify and divide life span into categories: infant, children, teen, adults, and seniors: place different values to different ages
zeros
elements of a story or a picture that are not told or seen and yet offer key insights into issues that might be too sensitive to discuss or display publicly.
MARVIN HARRIS
emphasized environmental adaptation, technologies, & methods of acquiring or producing food in the development of culture. created the view of Cultural Materialism: all aspects of a society's culture are derived from its economic foundation
language loss
extinction of languages that have very few speakers: language revitalization: langs not written down preserving endangered langs: info the is beg. to transform the ways in which linguistic anthropologists document and preserve endangered langs.
its toolmaker not toymaker (FINAL)
false
salavge ethnography (FINAL) the answer is t/f = true
fieldwork by boas to rapidly collect cultural, material, linguistic and biological info about U.S. Native pops. being devastated by western expansion. rapid gathering of all available material: artifacts, photographs, recordings of spoken langs, songs, etc would do oral interviews than actual behavior since they were running out of them. (native cultures were rapidly disappearing)
E.E. Evans Pritchard (witchcraft)
final
Charles Darwin
first articulated the throw by Natural Selection in his book in 1859: On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection, or the Preservation of Favoured Races in the Struggle
race (FINAL)
flawed system of classification, created and re-created over time , with no biological basis that uses certain physical characteristics to divide the human population into supposedly discrete groups
Pierre Bourdieu
focused on Education & Social Reproduction: Studied the French educational system in order to understand relationship among class, culture and power. He viewed the concept that education is considered as the key to upward Social Mobility found within stratified societies. He felt the Meritocracy of education- students deemed successful on basis of their individual talent & motivation- should provide all students an equal opportunity.
redistribution
form of exchange in which accumulated wealth is collected from the members of the group and reallocated in a different pattern
redistribution
form of exchange in which accumulated wealth is collected from the members of the group and reallocated in a different pattern ex: Food aide to Zimbabwe or when we receive a paycheck, our taxes part of US govnt system of redistribution All goods goes to a central location: either chief storehouse or central government.
true (FINAL)
franz boas, mead, bronisnki, and ruth benedicts all conducted fieldwork with participation observation: TRUE
values (FINAL)
fundamental beliefs about what is important, true, or beautiful and what makes a good life.
structural gender violence
gendered societal patterns of unequal access to wealth, power, and basic resources such as food, shelter and health care that differentially affect women in particular
survey:
information gathering tool for quantitative data analysis to reach a broader sample of participants around key issues, but rarely do they subsist for participant observation and face to fce interviews
qualitative data
information that cannot be counted but may be even more significant or understanding the dynamics of a community descriptive data drawn from non statistical sources, including participant observation, personal stories, interviews and life stories
genotype
inherited genetic factors that provide the framework for an organism's physical form; these factors constitute the total genetic endowment that the organism, in turn, can pass down to its descendants
compassionate marriages
marriage built on love, intimacy and personal choice rather than social obligation
endogamy
marriage to someone within the kinship group
Paleontologists group our immediate ancestors into 5 primary categories
pre-australopithecus australopithecus homo habilis homo erectus homo sapiens
prehistoric archaeology
reconstruction of human behavior in the distant past (before written records) through the examination of artifacts. campsites, hunting grounds, buildings, burials, and especially garbage dumps are rich source of material. these archaeologists find tools, weapons, pottery, human and animal bones, jewelry, seeds, charcoal, ritual items, building foundations, and even coprolites (fossilized fecal matter).
globalization
refers to the worldwide intensification of interations and the increased movement of money, people, goods, and ideas within and across national borders
Clifford Geertz interpretivist approach
saw cultures as a set of ideas or knowledge shared by a group of people that provides a common body of information about how to behave, why to behave that way and what that behavior means conceptual framework that sees culture primarily as symbolic system of deep meaning ex) wink and twitch of the eye same muscle movement but different in meaning.
Paleogeneticists
scientists who studies the past through the examination of preserved genetic material DNA mutates- scientists who specialize in this form of dating/analysis they study the genetics of DNA from generation to generation through mothers- means: all modern humans have a matrilineal- "most common ancestor"- Africa apprx. 170,000 yrs ago DNA analysis indicates all humans were originally all from Africa.100,000 yrs ago human populations began to migrate to the Middle East and then Europe
Edward Tylor and Lewis Morgan
seeked to organize the vast quantities of data about the diversity of cultures worldwide being accumulated through colonial and missionary experiences during 19th century. They were influenced by charles darwin: suggested in unilineal cultural evolution
commnitas
sense of camaraderie, a common vision of what constitutes a good life, and a commitment to take social action to move toward achieving this vision that is shaped by the common experience of rites of passage
ascribed status (caste)
social position inherited, assigned as birth, and passed down from generation to generation with enforced boundaries
Rules of descent:
social rules that stipulate the nature of relationships from one generation to another. Members trace their connections back to a common ancestor through a chain of parent-child links.
marriage
socially recognized relationship that may involve physical and emotional intimacy as well as legal rights to property and inheritance
synchronic approach
sought roc control experiments by limiting consideration of the larger historical and social context in order to isolate as many variables as possible
ethnocentrism (FINAL)
strong human tendency to believe that one's own culture or way of life is normal, nature, and superior to the beliefs and practices of others.
Ethnomusicologist, Kyra Gaunt
studied how music and games became a part of the construction of gender
historic linguists
study how language changes over time within a culture and as it moves across cultures
kinesics (FINAL)
study of the relationship between body movements and communication (facial expressions, gestures, postures that covey messages with or without words: nods, handshakes, bows, and arms folded tightly across communicate information)
descriptive linguistcics (FINAL)
study of the sounds, symbols, and gestures of a language and their combination into forms that communicate meaning ex) the word doesnt look like a pig but when we hear it, we automatically envision the pic of pig in our mind
sociolinguists
study of the ways culture shapes language and language shapes culture, particularly the intersection of language and systems of power such as race, gender, class and age
economics
study of ways in which choices people make combine to determine how society/culture will use scarce resources to produce and distribute goods and services
phonology
study of what sounds exist and which ones are important for a particular language. (might end up with pig instead of big)
historical linguistics
suds of the development of language over time, including its change and varations
Code Switching
switching back and forth bet.. one linguistic variant and another depending on the cultural context What is said and how said is often influenced by variables such as: AGE GENDER RELATIVE SOCIAL STATUS
underdevelopment
term used to suggest that poor countries are poor as a result of their relationship to an unbalanced global economic system
bipedalism (under Pre-Australopithecines)
the ability to habitually walk on two legs; one of the key distinguishing characteristics of humans and our immediate ancestors.
Rituals embody:
the beliefs, passions and sense of solidarity of a group of people
gender stratification (FINAL)
unequal distribution of power and access to a group's resources, opportunities, rights, and privileges based on gender
Fictive
unrelated individuals who are regarded & treated as relatives.
gender violence (FINAL)
forms of violence shaped by the gender identities of the people involved includes verbal abusive, stalking, harassment, and any form of psychological or physical threat that evokes the fear of violence: rape, sex trafficking, dowry death, female infanticide, female genital cutting and the battering and abuse of intimate partners and family members
Four-field approach
interrelated fields: physical anthropology, archaeology anthropology, linguistic anthropology and cultural anthropology
Holism (FINAL)
anthropological commitment to look at the whole picture of human life, include culture, biology, history, and language across space and time
Participation Observation
anthropological research strategy involving both participation in and observation of the daily life of the people being studied
field notes
anthropologists written observations and reflections on places, practices, events, and interviews
developmental adaptation
way in which human growth and development an be influenced by factors other than genetics, such as nutrition, disease and stress ex) height is not only influenced by DNA but the quality and quantity of food teen and diseases experienced.
mythology area is divided into 6 different areas (geographic area) <- cultural areas: name at least 3
African mythology oceania mythology middle east mythology American mythology European mythology
Ritual
An act or series of acts regularly repeated over years or generations that embody the beliefs of a group of people and create a sense of continuity and belonging.
Ambika
The mother goddess "perfect universal presence": There is also a multitude of deities who dwell in Heaven. One important deity: Ambika: Patron deity of maternal prosperity Childbirth and protection of women.
slash & burn agriculture (aka: swidden farming)
a practice of clearing land for cultivation
Bourgeoisie
capitalist class that owns the Means of Production- factories, machines, tools, raw materials, land, and financial capital needed to make things.
prestige (weber)
reputation, influence and deference bestowed on certain people because of their membership in certain groups
gender studies
research into the cultural construction of masculinity and felinity across cultures as flexible, complex, and historically and culturally constructed categories. Thanks to Margaret Mead: she challenged U.S. cultural assumptions about human sexuality and gender roles
interview
research strategy of fathering data through formal or informal conversation with informats
initiative magic
ritual performance that archives efficacy by imitating the desired magical result
contagious magic
ritual words or performances that achieve efficacy as certain materials that come into contact with one person carry a magical connection that allows power to be transferred from person to person
emic (FINAL)
approach to gathering data that investigate how local people think and how they understand the world
Art in Human History
archaeological records humans and art- at least tens of thousands of years. - Paleolithic cave paintings in Europe - Lascaux cave, France - Altamira cave, Spain
grammar
combined set of observations about the rules governing the formation of morphemes and syntax that guide language use
asexuality
lack of erotic attraction to others
polygyny
marriage between one man and two or more woman - Nuer of Sudan, Brahmans of Nepal
polyandry
marriage between one woman and two or more men - Nyar of India, Nyimba of Tibet and Nepal
Four key evolutionary forces
mutation natural selection gene migration genetic drift
sex work
labor through which one provides sexual services for money
(FINAL)
gender identity definition
warriors of the amazon (FINAL)
they drink it as a banana soup
patrilineal
tracking kinship through the father's side
the azande trace all misfortunes to _____ and for them it involves a _____
witchcraft psychic power the tray be used consciously or unconsciously by a witch — a woman or a man — to cause misfortunes or death
Clifford Geertz
"religion as a cultural system"
Hijras
-Third gender, considered neither male or female. -Religious followers of Hindu Mother Goddess. -Are revered and feared.
Americas Creation Myths
1) Aztec- Sun God 2) Lakota - White Buffalo Calf Woman 3) Mayan - Sun/Moon Gods
Founding of Tribal Chiefs
1) Narrative tells of the founding of the Tribal chiefs of governance. It tells of the creation of theCouncil of 144 chosen from the ten Cheyenne bands. 2) Members served for ten-year terms. 3) They met only during Summer,Cheyenne nation gathered forcommunal buffalo hunts. 4) Settled disputes and organized hunts. 5) Chiefs were men of judgment & good character. ex: Cheyenne, American plains
Religion is not so much talked about:
1) performed in public dance displays, rites and rituals (danced and sung) 2) Hopi - Kachina
applied anthropology
60% are these: work outside of academic settings to apply the strategies and insights of anthropology directly to world problems
James Frazer
The Golden Bough (1890) Book (MAGIC)
multiculturalism
A pattern of ethnic relations in which new immigrants and their children enculturate into the dominant national culture and yet retain their culture ethnic culture.
eugenics
A pseudoscience attempting to scientifically prove the existence of separate human races to improve the population's genetic composition by favoring some races over others
religion (FINAL)
A set of beliefs based on a unique vision of how the world ought to be, often revealed through insights into a supernatural power and lived out in community.
Kindred
A smaller group within the known bilateral relatives with whom they will interact, socialize, and rely on for economic & emotional assistance.
Fundamental concept of evolution
All living species share a common ancestry from which they have descended. The more closely the two organisms relate biologically- more recent their ancestry.
GHOST VENGENCE
Ancestor gods will inflict sickness on guilty people directly without being invoked.
Creating ethnic Identity
Anthropologists see Ethnicity as a cultural construction, not as a natural formation based on biology or inherent human nature. Barth (1969)- ethnicity is a "social organization of cultural differences"
Dogon
Awa dance/ lead souls of dead to final resting place in family alters and to consecrate their passage to rank of ancestors. (FINAL) the purpose of the joke of the awe dance is that they guide the dead to resting place in family altars ex: African - Mali
EE. EVAN PRITCHARD, in 1937 describes an elaborate religious system of the ____ in which ______ are central elements in daily life and conversation
Azande magic, witchcraft, and poison oracles
TOTEMISM (FINAL)
Belief system in which people believe they are descendents of spirit /ancestor beings who may be either human or animal. They are believed to give protection / guidance
ETHNOGRAPHY
Collecting and analyzing information about culture. The activities, beliefs, & attitudes that groups of people engage in from a daily basis
Margaret Mead (FINAL)
Coming of Age in Samoa (her book) Her focus was on Enculturation & its powerful effects on cultural patterns and personality types. its powerful effects on cultural patterns and personality types. focus explored the seeming sexual freedom & experimentation of young Samoan women- then compared it with the represses sexuality of young women in the U.S. She suggest the powerful role of enculturation in shaping behavior- even to behavior that is imagined to have biological origins.
Gods & Goddesses
Considered as the great & remote beings usually perceived as controlling the universe with some recognized as responsible for particular parts of the universe.
China- Nuwa (FINAL)
Creation deity - portrayed as a beautiful woman half serpent. She came after Pangu and created animal life and then humans.
DNA
Deoxyribonucleic acid: the feature of a cell that provides the genetic code for the organism, giving it a blueprint for development and growth.
Variation
Differences between species and within species. Comes from random genetic changes in individual organisms. Allows for better survival rate and reproduction when shifts in natural environment or competition for food or mates change. Evolutionary change occurs through generations.
General reciprocity
Distribution of goods with no immediate or specific return expected.
Other forms of Unilineal descent
Double descent Parallel descent Ambilineal descent
Unilineal Evolution: stage 3 (FINAL)
E.B. Tylor & Henry Morgan civilization barbarism savagery
sugar
Europeans established plantation economy in Caribbean and South America- produce sugar for export to Europe.
Negative reciprocity
Exchange conducted for the purpose of material advantage & the desire to get something for nothing.
Balanced reciprocity
Exchange of goods of nearly equal value with a clear obligation to return them within a specified time limit. ex: Kula Ring- Trobriand Islands
Bronislaw Malinowski
FUNCTIONALISM: Culture traits have social functions that contribute to the smooth operations of the whole society. Believed social, economic & political structures organized to satisfy human needs & that diverse practices have specific functions to address needs.
ETHNOHISTORY
Field of study for reconstructing & interpreting the history of indigenous peoples from their point of view as well as the points of view of the ethnohistorians.
Ethnography
Fieldwork in a particular culture. To understand human nature requires comparative, cross-cultural studies. Human behavior is adaptable and worthy of study.
Monasticism
Five Great Vows (Mahavratas) Right knowledge, right faith, and right conduct are the three most essentials for attaining liberation. In order to acquire these, one must observe the five great vows: 1. Non-violence - Ahimsa 2. Truth - Satya 3. Non-stealing - Achaurya or Asteya 4. Celibacy/Chastity - Brahmacharya 5. Non-attachment/Non-possession - Aparigraha Ascetic lifestyle Monks and Nuns are fulltime Take 5 great vows
"Primitive" art
Franz Boas collected extensive pieces of ritual from the Kwakitul peoples. ex: Grandma Moses
Lakshmi
Goddess of wealth and purity. Portrayed as a beautiful woman with 4 arms. Standing or sitting on a Lotus petal with at least one or two white elephants standing behind, anointing water. Consort of Vishnu. Strong in Hindu mythology.
Ralph Linton
He claimed we learn our culture by growing up with it - culture is transmitted by generation to generation "culture is learned"
Sexuality Construction in US.
Homosexuality Heterosexuality Bisexuality Asexuality
Symbolic culture
Ideas people have about themselves, others, and the world, and the ways that people express these ideas.
Australopithecines
Includes Taung child and Lucy Lived between 4 & 1 may Their brain size and body size remained consistent. Homo Habilis and Homo Erectus were for a time contemporary with australopithecines. with these two new groups our ancestors experienced a dramatic increase in intelligence and the use of material culture.
Pre-Australopithecines
Intermediate form between apes and humans. Lived between 7 & 4 may - discovered in the middle awash region. -first evidence of transitional feature bet. the primate line and australopithecines and later humans
Racial Classification
Is the attempt to assign humans to discrete categories based on common ancestry.
What do you know about our Human Ancestors?
It all started at Middle Awash River Valley in northern Ethiopia one of the richest area of discovery of almost every major grouping of human ancestor over the last 6 million yrs. Allows scholars to identify patterns of continuity and change / historical record of evolutionary change in our immediate human ancestors.
rapid change
dramatic transformations of economics, politics, and culture characteristics of contemporary globalization
Two-Spirits
Known as Berdache Transgendered individuals adopt roles and behaviors of opposite gender. Considered having supernatural powers, allowed special priveleges
Raven (FINAL)
Kwakitul Raven Mask. aka: Culture Hero & Trickster (Franz Boas) Gets into trouble because he is mischievous. Myths surrounding his exploits.
Cultural Comparisons
Means of understanding cultural differences and similarities through data analysis rather than direct observations.
Descent group obligations
Membership can be restricted 1- based on where people live. 2- based on choice 3- most common membership restriction by making sex legally relevant instead of tracing membership back to common ancestor- membership is through male or female- tracing exclusively through one sex.
Modern Homo sapiens
Modern anatomical characteristics emerged as early as 200,000 yBP
Phratries: groups of linked clans that are usually exogamous
Moieties: groups of linked clans that divide a society into two halves, usually exogamous.
Leslie White
N. American Anthropologist who claimed that Culture consisted of 3 essential elements: Techno-economic Social Ideological Observed that human behavior originates in the use of symbols- symbols can be culturally understood by members of culture. "culture is symbolic"
Are humans the only species to have sex other than for procreation
NO, bonobos, dolphins and humans are the only mammals that have sex for fun rather than exclusively for procreation
Fetishes
Native American carving believed to have special power (animal or revered god <- Zuni fetish/wemawe) Zuni tribe, who call themselves Asiwi
Hinduism (no single founder or single scripture)
Oldest living religion with some elements dating back one thousand years (connected to Jainism/Buddism/Sikhism) Belief that soul goes through a cycle of birth, death, successive lives. Next life is dependent on how previous life was lived. - belief in karma and samara (reincarnation) Common value system : Dharma Supreme GOD- qualities and forms are represented by multitude of deities that emanate from him
Sikhism
One God (without form or gender) - everyone has direct access to God - A good life is lived as part of a community, by living honestly & caring for others - Empty religious rituals & superstitions have no value - everyone is equal before God - Cycle of Birth, life, rebirth Quality of life depends on law of Karma- living a painful life is to achieve a total knowledge of and union and God.
Christianity
One God: known as Father Trinity: Father,Son,Holy Spirit Jesus Christ: Son Of God, Savior of World. God is: - Omniscient: knows all things - Omnipotent: all powerful - Omnipresent: present everywhere - Sovereign, Holy, Just/Righteous, Love, True, Spirit, Creator, Infinite and Eternal
Avunculocal residence:
Patterns of residence after marriage in which the couple lives with or near the husband's mother's brother. (husband's uncle)
modernization theories
Post-World War II economic theories that predicted that with the end of colonialism, less developed countries would follow the same trajectory toward modernization as the industrialized countries.
development
Post-World War II strategy of wealthier nations to spur global economic growth , alleviate poverty, and raise living standards through strategic investment in national economies of former colonies.
Anne Fausto Sterling
Proposed a theory that that there is a middle ground between male and female absolute categories. -Theres approximately 1.7% of live births that do not conform to an absolute sex chromosome, gonad, genitals, or hormonal dimorphism
Jain Worship
Public: Stone Temples Home: Wooden Shrines that resemble temple
Émile Durkheim
Religion: "a unified system of beliefs and practices relative to sacred things, things set apart and forbidden- beliefs and practices which unite Into one single moral community-church, all who adhere to them".
State societies
Republics empires ex: inca of peru
cargo system
Ritual system common in S. America & Central America in which wealthy people are required to hold a series of costly ceremonial offices-they provide food, alcohol, other goods during religious celebrations during the year. - Practice, value or form of social organization that evens out wealth within society. - The organization will reallocate resources among a group to maximize collective good. - In U.S.- done by local, State and Federal tax codes.
RITES OF RENEWAL
Rituals performed with the goal of renewing the bounty of the earth. Usually seasonal or annual, with both sacred & secular elements are celebrated ex: Druids: Salisbury Plain, England Stonehenge
Residence rules
Rules that stipulate where a couple will reside after their marriage.
feast givers/big men
Self-made leaders able to convince relatives/neighbors to contribute goods for sake of community, only to be given away in an elaborate ritual
Photographic gaze
Shows the culture through those being photographed.
Slaves
Spanish & Portuguese plantation owners turned to African slave trade to supply labor needs. Between 16th - 18th century, millions of Africans were sold as slaves.
E.E. Evans Pritchard
Studied Aznde people of Suda, Africa -Magic was not irrational expression but a component of a highly organized, rational, and logical system of thought that complemented science in understanding the way the world works. -Azande trace all misfortunes to witchcraft.Their witchcraft does not involve ritual, spells, or medicines. - Use psychic power consciously or unconsciously Ex: Azande Diviner
Kinship system
System of determining who one's relatives are and what one's relationship is to them.
human lang are the only one that has lang
TRUE: other species has call system out of sound
Islam
Text : Qur'an: word of God Adam, Noah, Abraham, Moses and Jesus all considered as great Prophets but Mohammed is considered last in series of prophets. Practice 5 pillars of Islam: Obligatory acts of worship, Testimony, Prayer, Alms-giving, Fasting and Pilgrimage to Mecca Pilgrimage to Kabba in Mecca: known as Hajj.
POLYTHEISM
The belief in multiple gods, goddesses, spirits and various aspects of one god. ex: Centered in pantheon of myths & rituals- Shinto, Ancient Greek, Roman, Germanic, Slavic,& Celtic, Chinese folk religion, Buddhism- Tantric, Hinduism, Neo-pagan faiths & Wicca: Earth Mother & other deities.
Cultural Relativism
The belief that no culture is inherently superior or inferior to another understanding a group's beliefs and practices within their own cultural context, without making judgements
EMPIRICISM
The practice of conducting studies through direct observation & objective description.
Assimilation (FINAL)
The process through which minorities accept the patterns and norms of the dominant culture and cease to exist as separate groups
Ethnomusicology
The study of music
political anthropology
The study of the ways communities plan group actions, make decisions affecting the group, select leadership, and resolve disputes.
Material culture
The tools people make and use, the clothing, and ornaments they wear, the buildings, they live in, and the household utensils they use
political organization
The ways societies are organized to plan group activities, make decisions affecting members of the group, select leadership & settle disputes.
Transhumance
This form of production usually involves herders moving livestock seasonally between high and low-altitude grazing areas
Market Exchange
Todays patterns of exchange are influenced by economic markets that facilitate buying and selling of land, natural resources, goods, services, labor, and ideas. This can vary in size such as a village market to the New York Stock Exchange on Wall Street. In some areas people will barter.
KoKo (FINAL)
Trained in 1972 Mastered 1,000 ASL signs- understood more than 2,000 spoken words GORILLA
Collateral Household
Type of extended household that includes siblings and their spouses and their children
Where is domestic violence a widespread problem?
U.S. Culture
lNoam Chomsky [Universal Grammar} (FINAL)
Underlying similarities in process of learning that unites all human languages.
EVOLUTIONISM
View held by early social philosophers that human differences can be accounted for by different rates of progress, leading to different levels of cultural achievement. Individuals adapt to their social environment & historical conditions as well as they do to their physical surroundings- goal= progress & possibility of betterment
Household
Will include three or more generations. We refer to this as an Extended Family Household. Ex: Muslims of Western Bosnia- "Zadruga
Proletariat
Working class: class of laborers who own only their labor. They lacked land to grow their own food, tools to make their own products, and capital to build workshops or factories. They sold their work (their labor) to capitalists in return for wages.
Kippah/Kippot or Yarmulke
Worn to show support and follow ancient tradition to cover head as sign of respect and devout to God
E.E. Evans Pritchard
Wrote The Nuer: based research with a Sundanese tribe over 11 months. he documented the group's social structure: political, economic, and kinship. however the Sundanese were living in British resistance so a lot of anthropology were pissed at evan because the facts were totally untrue studied the Nuer of Sudan
Émile Durkheim
a French Sociologist who explored ideas of the sacred and the profane, as well as the practical effects of religious ritual.
creationism
a belief that God created earth and all living creatures in their present form as recently as six thousand years ago
key informant
a community member who advises the anthropologist on comment issues, provides feedback, and warns against culture miscues (aka: cultural consultant)
cultural adaptation
a complex innovation,such as fans, furnaces, and lights, that allows humans to cope with their environment.
dependency theory
a critique of modernization theory that argued that, despite the end of colonialism, the underlying economic relations of the modern world economic system had not changed
affinal relationships
a kinship relationship established through marriage and/alliance, not through biology or common descent
Kinetic Orality
a musical genre combining body movement and voice.
Martyr (FINAL)
a person who sacrifices his or her life for the sake of religion.
hegemony
ability of a dominant group to create consent and agreement within a pop. without the use or threat of force
E.B. Tyler
all humans, plants, animals have individual spirits: springs, rivers, mountains, stones, & the woods which may be full with a variety of unattached or free-ranging spirits.
Saints
an individual who is considered exceptionally close to God and is exalted after death.
life chances
an individual's opportunities to improve quality of life and achieve life goals
situational negotiation of identity
an individual's self identification with a particular group that can shift according to social location.
intelligent design
an updated version of creationism that claims to propose an evidence- based argument to contradict the theory of evolution. They suggested that nothing could be random because life was too complex, and that such complexity required the involvement of an intelligent designer- although that designers identity was not specific, however, it is left to the impression that it is the Christian God
mapping
analysis of the physical and or geographic space where fieldwork is being conducted
Intersectionality
analytic framework for assessing how factors such as race, gender, and class interact to shape individual life chances and societal patterns of stratification. Race and Gender determine how class is lived and how all three systems of power and stratification build on and shape one another.
Homosexuality
attraction to and sexual relations between individuals of the same sex
heterosexuality
attractive to and sexual relations between individuals of the opposite sex
bisexuality
attractive to and sexual relations with members of both sexes
ANCESTOR WORSHIP
belief in the importance of ancestors as they affect the lives of their survivors, protecting descendants in return for rituals of honor performed to show them respect. Serves as effective means of social control. Dead ancestors are considered to be fully functioning members of descent groups. Death of an elder marks elevation in status to supernatural being
Animism (FINAL)
belief that spirit beings animate nature
white supremacy
belief that whites are biologically different and superior to people of our races
genetic adaptation
changes in genetic that occur at a pop. level in response to certain features of the environment
climate change
changes to earths climate, including global warming produced priorly by increasing concentrations of greenhouse gases created by human activities such as burning fossil fuels and deforestation
Washu
chimpazz
economic behavior
choosing the method for action to maximize the perceived benefits
matrilineal
constructing kinship through the group through the mother's side of the family
militarization
contested social process through which a civil society organizes for the production of military violence
neocolonialism
continued pattern of unequal economic relations despite the formal end of colonial political and military control
Art:
created received ideas techniques expression creative communication inspiration
framing process
creation of shared meanings and definitions that motivate and justify collective action by social movements
fine art
creative expression and communication often associated with cultural elites ex: museums, galleries, operas, symphonies , ballet performances
popular art
creative expression and communication often associated with the general population ex) - less refined - less sophisticated creative expression communication associated general population.
reflexivity
critical self- examination of the role the anthropologist plays and an awareness that one's identity affects one's fieldwork and theoretical analyses
Tefillin (FINAL)
cubic black leather boxes w/straps that Orthodox men on head and arm during weekday morning prayers 12+ year old boys wear
horticulture
cultivation of plants for subsistence through non intensive use of land and labor they use simple tools such as sticks and hoes to cultivate small garden plots. Land is rotated to use and exploit more fertile ground.
incest taboo
cultural rules that forbid sexual relations with certain close relatives
Parallel descent
descent & inheritance follow gender-linked lines so that men consider themselves descended from their fathers & women consider themselves descended from their mothers.
etic
description of local behavior and beliefs from the anthropologists perspective in ways that can be compared across cultures
Nationalism
desire of an ethnic community to create and/or maintain a nation-state
Mutation
deviation from the standard DNA code
Every culture develops it's own set -> Patterns of Stratification
differentiates people into groups or classes. Categories are identified as: Egalitarian & Ranked societies
census (FINAL)
every 10 years, the U.S. conducts a census (began in 1790) to provide an idea of changing conception of race - 1850: White, Black, Mulatto' (mixed race) - 1870: White, Black, Mulatto, Chinese, Indian (Native American)'. - 1940: 'White, Negro, Indian, Chinese, Japanese, Filipino, Hindu, Korean (included Hindu which is actually a religion) - 2010 census: 14 separate "race" boxes
barter
exchange of goods and services one for the other
reciprocity
exchange of resources, goods, and services among people of relatively equal status; meant to create and reinforce social ties
reciprocity
exchange of resources, goods, and services among people of relatively equal status; meant to create and reinforce social ties among givers and receivers; fulfill social obligations and also raised prestige among gift giver
gender (FINAL)
expectations of thought and behavior that each culture assigns to people of different sexes
historic archaeology
exploration of the more recent past through an examination of physical remains and artifacts as well as written or royal records.: houses, stores, factories, sunken sale ships, even polar ice caps to better understand recent human history and the impact of humans on the environment.
triangle trade
extensive exchange of slaves, sugar, cotton and furs between Europe, Africa, and the americas in the 1500's that transformed economic, political, and social life on both sides of the Atlantic. Also brought W. Europe the goods needed to grow their national economies and expand role in international trade.
paralanguage
extensive set of noises (such as cries) and tones of voice that covey significant information about the speaker (laughs, cries, sighs, yells<- indicates whether the speaker is happy, sad, angry, tired, etc) email and text messages: emojis
means of production
factories, machines, tools, raw materials, land and financial capital needed to make things
as humans we also will form groups through work, education and politics. none compare to the power of ____ and ____ to provide support and nurture, ensure reproduction of the next generation, protect group assists and influences social, economic and political systems.
families kinship networks
family of procreation
family group created when one reproduces and within which one rears children
Jane Goodail
famous and living primatologist: study chimpanzee behavior in African nature preserve by being able to conduct such field research study has been able to offer insights into
Bronislaw Malinowski
father of fieldwork. stuck on the Trobriand Islands as result of WW1 : Argonauts of the Western Pacific (book about examination of the Kula ring: alb orate system of exchange) urged anthropologist to stay at lands for a long period to learn and engage in participation observation he used participant observation
nativism
favoring certain long-term inhabitants over new immigrants 19th cent. 'Nativists' fought hard to preserve the so-called racial purity of nations Anglo-Saxon origins. Riots, violence, discrimination, anti-immigrant views common
TRUE
field work strategy developed by Franz Boas to rapidly collect cultural materials, linguistic and biological being devastated by : known by salvage ... 3rd chapter : 1st
true
field work study discussed by frnaz boas to collet biological, culturally...
Arnold Van Gennep (FINAL)
folkloristL TALKED ABOUT SACRED THREAD CEREMONY: RELIGIOUS CEREMONY FOR 8 YEAR OLD: HINDUISM AND JAIN SANSKAR)
digitial natives
generation of people born after 1980 who have been raised in a digital age
dowry
gift of goods or money from the bride's family to the groom's family as part of the marriage process common in india
bridewealth
gift of goods or money from the rooms family to the brides family as part of the marriage process common in Africa to compensate her family for the loss of the bride. it establishes reciprocal rights and obligations of husband wife gives legitimacy to their children and assign the children to the husbands family
global mediascape
global culture flows of media and visual images that enable linkages and communication across boundaries in ways unimaginable a century ago
cosmopolitanism
global outlook emerging in response to increasing globalization
economic system
goods and services are produced, distributed and consumed refers to norms governing production, distribution and consumption of goods & services within society or culture
ranked society
group in which wealth is not stratified but prestige and status are
species
group of related organisms that can interbreed and produce fertile, viable offspring
Associations
groups that link people in community on basis of shared interests & skills.
commodity chain
hands an item passes through bet. producer and consumer
false (FINAL)
he studied fijimss.... (the bird can't spell it) not seagulls
Leith Mullings (Intersectionality among Race, Gender & Class)
her work primarily focused on reexamining class by analyzing the deep connections among class, race and gender, by using the Holistic anthro approach in harlem
food foragers (FINAL this was a true/false one)
humans who subsist by hunting, fishing and gathering plants to eat ex: live in most marginal of earth's envy: cold places, forests, island, Inuit (eskimos of alaska/canada), Native Australian aborigines and inhabitants of African and south american rainforests
norms
idea are rules about how people should behave in particular situations or toward certain other people: normal and appropriate behavior: may include: what to wear on certain occasions, what you say in polite company, who you can kiss, etc cultural may discourage exogamy (marriage outside ones group) and encourage endogamy (marriage within ones group)
flexible acccumlulation
increasingly flexible strategies that corporations use to accumulate, enabled by innovative communication and transportation technologies: advances in transportation and communication have enabled companies to move their production tactilities around the world in search of cheeper labor, lower taxes, and fewer environmental regulations.
Types or racism
individual racism racial ideology Institutional racism
Consanguines
individual related by blood
racism
individual thoughts and actions and institutional patterns and policies that create unequal access to power, resources, and opportunities based on imagined differences among groups
Affinal
individuals related through marriage
imagined community
invented sense of connection and shared traditions that underlies identification with a particular ethnic group or nation whose members likely will never meet. benedict anderson conceived the imagined community because almost all of the people within it have never met and will most likely never meet.
Archaeology
investigation of the human past by means of excavating analyzing material remains (artifacts)
informed consent
key strategy for protecting those being studied by ensuring that they re ugly informed of the goals of the project and have clearly indicated their consent to participate
descent group
kinship group in which primary relationships are traced through consanguine (blood) relatives
nuclear family
kinship unit of mother, father, and children - based in euro-american ideal that is not found in other cultural context
cultural capital
knowledge habits, and taste learned from parents and family that individuals can use to gain access to sauce and valuable resources in society.
Neandertals
late variety of archaic homo sapiens prevalent in Europe - they have been depicted as slow, unintelligent and inarticulate cave dwellers who were far removed physically and mentally from modern humans (these are inaccurate) - neandertal brain had achieved modern size: individuals were physically active and able to survive and settle in the most extreme of natural environments (they made elaborate tools) - hunted big game with sophistication and success, revealing strength, intelligence, culture and soil organization. - they were the first to bury their dead: (fully laid out skeletons have been recovered from burial pits showing a distinct level of care and intention bet. the living and the dead (anatomy would have enabled them to speak)
Jim Crow
laws implemented after the civil war to legally enforce segregation, particularly in the South, after the end of south : housing, education, voting rights, property ownership and access to public services
periphery countries
least developed and least powerful nations; often exploited by the core countries as sources of raw materials, cheap labor and markets
two types of descent groups
lineage and clans
productivity
linguistic ability to us known words to invent new word combinations
civil society organization
local nongovernmental organization that challenges state policies and uneven development, and advocates for sources and opportunity for members of its local communities
Paleoanthropology
part of physical anthro: study of the history of human evolution through the fossil record
dalits (aka: untouchables)
members of india's lowest caste, literally "broken people"
social network analysis
method for examining relationships in a community, often conducted by identifying who people turn to in times of need
social media
new forms of communication based on computer and internet based technologies the facilitate social engagement, work, and pleasure
dialect
nonstandard variation of a language
avatar
object, real, or virtual, that graphically represents a participant in a game or other activity
sex (FINAL)
observable physical differences bet. male and female, esp. biological expressions related to human reproduction
shamans (FINAL)
part time religious practitioner with special abilities to connect individuals with supernatural powers or beings *know where we can find them on the test too* <- yamamon are located Lec: Derives from name given healing specialists among the seminomadic people of Siberia..now applied to healers, spiritualists, witches, and witch doctors in cultures worldwide ex: Native American, Amazon, South African
prestige language
particular way of speaking or language variation, that is associated with wealth, success, education and power
liminality
one stage in a rite of passage during which a ritual participants experiences a period of outsiderhood, set apart from normal society, that is key to achieving a new perspective on the past, future, and current community
primatology
part of physical anthro: study of living nonhuman primates as well as primate fossils to better understand human evolution and early human behavior
most people in the world practice _____ descent as their primary strategy to track kin group membership
patrilineal
Institutional racism
patterns by which racial inequality is structured through key cultural institutions, policies, and systems (aka: structural racism) ex: education, housing, employment, law enforcement
Double descent
people belong to kinship groups of BOTH their mother and father.
ethnic boundary markers
people create and promote this - A practice or belief, such as food, clothing, language, shared name, or religion, ancestry, certain territory, or even an imagined shared physical characteristic. All of these are used to signify who is in a group and who is not in the group
Bilateral
people feel related to both mother and fathers kin at same time.
authenticity
perception of an object's antiquity, uniqueness, and originality within a local culture
individual racism
personal prejudiced beliefs and discriminatory actions based on race
theory of evolution
physical anthropologistsconsider this to be the key to understanding the diversity of life on Earth today and how it relates to life in the past Def: theory that biological adaptations in organisms occur in response to changes in the natural environment and develop in populations over generations
melanin
pigment that gives human skin its color: produced by melanocytes in the skin
mutual transformation
potential for both the anthropologist and the members of the community being studied to be transformed by the interactions of fieldwork.
agency
potential power of individuals and groups to contest cultural norms, values, symbols, mental maps of reality, institutions and structures of power
agency
potential power of individuals and groups to contest cultural norms, values, symbols, mental maps of reality, institutions, and structures of power
colonialism
practice by which a nation-state extends political, economic and military power beyond its own borders over an extended period of time to secure access to raw materials, cheap labor, and markets in other countries or regions
colonialism
practice by which a nation-state extends political, economic, and military power beyond its own borders over and extended period of time to secure access to raw materials, cheap labor, and markets in other countries or regions. - centerpiece of European global economic activity
leveling mechanism
practices and organizations that reallocate resources among a group to maximize collective good
enculturation
process of learning culture
acclimatization
process of the body temporarily adjusting to the environment
ambilineal descent groups
samoans, maori, hawaiians and others in southeast asia and the pacific — trace kinship through both the mother and father (this is sometimes called bilateral or cognac)
bands
small kinship-based group of foragers who hunt and gather for a living over a particular territory lec: 1) Small , loosely organized groups. 2) Leaders are selected by personal qualities/skills. Lead by example, influence, lack authority to enforce opinions. 3) Decision making -relatively informal, open to participation to competent members. 4) Hunter/Gatherer groups- with family or households being the significant units of a band system. An egalitarian society. ex: mbuti, central africa
mobility is key (food foragers)
small, egalitarian groups followed movement of large animals and the seasonal growth of fruits, vegetables, and nuts to secure their survival.
morphemes (said) (FINAL)
smallest units of sound that carrying meaning on their own (the word cow or horse can convey meaning without needing additional sounds) Free Morpheme that can occur unattached in lang. ex: cat or dog Bound A sound that must be combined with other sounds ex: (S)
phonemes (FINAL)
smallest units of sounds that can make a different in meaning (b and p sound very similar but they make a significant difference in meaning)
achieved status (largely a class)
social position established and changeable during a person's lifetime. Social mobility contributes to change.
Republics
societies with elected rather than inherited leadership.
Empires
states expanded into larger units through conquest and the occupation or annexation of new territories.
language (FINAL)
system of communication that uses symbols such as words, sounds and gestures to convey information
culture
system of knowledge, beliefs, patterns of behavior, artifacts, and institutions that are created, learned, and shared by a group of people: includes norm, values, symbols, maps or reality, and material objects as well as structures of power: including media, education , religion, and politics (these are not universal, they vary from culture to culture)
kinship
system of meaning and power that cultures create to determine who is related to whom and to define their mutual expectations, rights, and responsibilities
class
system of power based on wealth, income, and status that creates an unequal distribution of a society's resources
Nation
term used to describe a group of people who shared a place of origin; now used interchangeably with Nation-state.
Bilocal residence
the couple alternates between living with the wife & husband's kin.
Neolocal residence
the couple establishes a new, independent household separate from their relatives
family of orientation
the family group in which one is born, grows up and develops life skills
TRUE (FINAL)
the in guides of india are known as the third gender. they are referred to the third gender because they have no private areas
Gene Migration
the movement of genetic material within a pop. and among diverse pop. The swapping of genetic material with a population and among diverse population. Genes travel from population to another in species/ increases the diversity of the gene pool in particular populations and decreases genetic diversity among groups. Explains genetic similarities in human population.
carrying capacity
the number of people who can be supported by the resources of the surrounding region In some food production groups the resources will be locally limited. (foragers, pastoralists, horticulturalists & lower-intensity agriculturalists).
karl marx referred to religion as:
the opiate of the masses
social reproduction
the phenomenon whereby social and class relations of prestige or lack of prestige are passed from one generation to the next bourdieu found this in french school system
sexual dimorphism (FINAL)
the phenotypic differences bet. males and females of the same species that is they differ physically in primary sexual characteristics as well as secondary sexual characteristic (breast size, hair, voice pitch)
multiregional continuity thesis
the theory that modern homo sapiens evolved directly from archaic homo sapiens living in regions across the world
"out of africa" theory
the theory that modern homo sapiens evolved first in Africa, migrated outward, and eventually replaced the archaic homo sapiens (aka: replacement theory)
gender performance
the way gender identity is expressed through action
phenotype
the way genes are expressed in an organism's physical form as a result of genotype interactions with environmental factors (both visible and invisible) such as nutrition, disease, and stress - on the base of phenotype alone, we may consider someone to be smarter, faster, stronger, better at math, etc, more prone to alcohol. We assume we can know something just by their genetic makeup but is this really true? no
cultural construction of gender
the ways humans learn to b shave as a man or woman and to recognize behaviors as masculine or feminine within their cultural context humans are born with biological sex, but we learn to be men and women. from the moment of brirth, we learn culture: walk, talk, eat, dress,think. we also learn what kids of behaviors are perceived as masculine or feminine
unilineal culture evolution
theory proposed by 19th century anthropologist that all cultures naturally evolve throughout eh same sequence of stages from simple to complex using the terms: savage, barbarian and civilized
cultural materialism
theory that argues that material conditions, including technology, determine patterns of social organization, including religious principles
false (FINAL)
there are 10 different perspectives in the discilipines of anthropology
sociolinguists
those who study language in its social and cultural contexts. for ex): examine how different speakers use language in different situations or with different people.
racialization
to categorize, to differentiate, and attribute a particular racial character to a person or group of people.
kinship analysis
traditional strategy of examine genealogies to uncover the relationships built upon structures such as marriage and family tie
Mafwe
traditional worship dance to Sun and Moon ex: African - Namibia
sex tourism
travel, usually organized through the tourism sector, to facilitate commercial sexual relations bet. tourists and local residents
enables a group of members to utilize known as economy (FINAL)
true
footages known for etc (FINAL)
true
lucy was the first to walk on 2 legs (FINAL)
true
3 identities to reciprocity (FINArL): general balanced and negative
truee
clan
type of decent group based on a claim to a founding ancestor but lacking genealogical documentation
lineage
type of descent group that races genealogical connection through generations by linking persons to a founding ancestor
historical linguistics
understanding language through history
tylor
understood behavior learned over time, passed down by generations and shared by members of a particular group believed that similarities among cultures emerge through independent invention as different cultures independently arrive at similar solutions to similar problems did not conduct own research; worked at home analyzing reports of others (morgan was an exception who didn't do this)
uneven development
unequal distribution of the benefits of globalization
magic
use of spells, incantations, words, and actions in an attempt to compel supernatural forces to act in certain ways, whether for good or for evil
polyvocality
uses of many voices in ethnographic writing and research question development, allowing the refer to hear more directly from the people in the study; By bringing the stories more to life, more vibrant and available to the readers
STRUCTURALISM CLAUDE LÉVI-STRAUSS
view that cultural differences can be explained by differences in forms or conceptual categories rather than in meanings. - used theories from structural linguistics to analyze symbolic expressions of culture in terms of their structures or patterns, in addition to their meanings.
focal vocabulary
words and terminology that develop with particular sophistication to describe the unique cultural realities experienced by a group of people
Sapir- Whorf hypothesis
work of edward sapir and benajmin whorf: the idea that different languages create different ways of thinking
one greek god (FINAL)
zeus
serial monogamy
individuals who marry again and over again, such as in divorce or death
Sacred
Anything that is considered holy.
Profane
Anything that is considered not holy
tribes
Associations. Age Sets (age-grade) ex: samburu, kenya
Egalitarian society
BOOK DEF: a group based on the sharing of resources to ensure success with a relative absence of hierarchy and violence Form of structure came from the Hunter/Gatherer society- as they are based in a sharing of resources to promote group success. Egalitarian societies ensure group success with an absence of hierarchy and violence within or among other groups. Such groups build a system of reciprocity
descent
The order and how individuals and family members feel and determine their kinship relationships and ancestral connections.
RELATIVISTIC PERSPECTIVE
Values & standards of cultures differ and deserve respect.
whiteness (FINAL)
a culturally constructed concept originating in 1691 Virginia designed to establish clear boundaries of who is white and who is not, a process central to the formation of U.S. racial stratification
life history (FINAL)
a form of interview that traces the biography of a person over time, examine change and illuminating the interlocking network of relationships in the community
deep time
a framework for considering the span of human history within the much larger age of the universe and planet Earth Universe age: 14 billion yrs. old Earth age: 4.5 billion yrs. old Life on Earth: 3.5 billion yrs. ago in form of single-celled organisms. Dinosaurs: 230-65 million yrs. ago Primates: between 65-55mya Our ancestor branch led: 7-6mya First Modern human: 170,000 yrs. ago
transgender (FINAL)
a gender identity or performance that does not fit with cultural norms related to one's assigned sex at birth ex) hijras:
Egalitarian societies:
a group based on the sharing of resources to ensure success with a relative absence of hierarchy and violence. ex: Ju/'hoansi (known formally as Bushmen of Kalahari desert-Southern Africa)
melting pot (FINAL)
a metaphor used to describe the process of immigrant assimilation into U.S. dominant culture In the melting point, minorities adopt the patterns and norms of the dominant culture and eventually cease to exist as separate groups: assimilation -eventually all cooked in the same pot, diverse groups become assimilated into one big stew.
Nation-state
a political entity, located within a geographic territory with enforced borders, where the population shares a sense of culture, ancestry, and destiny as a people. (ex: Japan- considered the largest Nation-state in the world)
gender stereotypes
a preconceived notion about the attributes of, difference bet. and proper roles for men and women in a culture ex) men are stereotyped to be more aggressive while women are expected to be more nurturing
ethnicity
a sense of historical, cultural, and sometimes ancestral connection to a group of people who are imagined to be distinct from those outside the group Ethnic Identity Most powerful identities that humans develop. It is a sense of connection to a group of people who are believed to share a common history, culture, and at times, ancestry. They are distinct from others outside the group. It is more expansive than kinship.
Racial ideology
a set of popular ideas about race that allow the discriminatory behaviors of individuals and institutions to seem reasonable, rational and normal. ex: media, school, government caused people in the US to believe that slavery was natural
hegemony
ability of a dominant group to create consent and agreement within a population without the use or threat of force
displacement (FINAL)
ability to use words to refer to objects not immediately present or events occurring in the past or future
increasing migration
accelerated movement of people within and between countiries
Wiccan (Gerald Gardner)
acknowledges the polarity of the Divine- both male and female deities are honored. honor simply a non-specific god and goddess, or they may choose to worship specific deities of their tradition, whether it be Isis and Osiris, Cerridwen and Herne, or Apollo and Athena. In Gardnerian Wicca, the true names of the gods are revealed only to initiated members, and are kept secret from anyone outside the tradition. ex: Autumn Equinox- Moonsong
marriage to scientists is also known as
affinal relationships
art
all ideas, forms, techniques and strategies the humans employ to express themselves creatively and to communicate their creativity and inspiration to others
false (FINAL)
all primates have spoken language only humans have spoken language
state
an autonomous regional structure of political, economic, and military rule with a central government authorized to make laws and use force to maintain order and defend its territory Have existed for thousands of years beginning in regions as: Iraq, China, India
state
an autonomous regional structure of political, economic, and military rule with a central govnt authorized to make laws and use force to maintain order and defend its territory lec: 1) Highly formal organized, government, centralized political systems with a hierarchical structure of authority. 2) Ultimate authority & power rest with head of state-President,King, Emperor. 3) Head of state delegates responsibilities to advisers/assistants. Has procedures to formally select leaders. 4) Also uses social control. ex: USA
universal gaze
an intrinsic way of perceiving art - thought by many in the western art world to be found across cultures — that informs what people consider to be art or not art
ethnology
analysis and comparison of ethnographic data across cultures
Max Weber
analyzed the emerging structures of stratification and added power and prestige for economic Stratification of wealth and income. Certain occupations might hold a higher or lower prestige in a culture. Ex: Physicians and farmers. Prestige affects Life Chances: individual's opportunities to improve quality of life and achieve life goals
Karl Marx
analyzed the increasing inequalities among rural land workers and emerging capitalist economy of 19th century Europe. He distinguished between two Distinct classes of people. - Bourgeoisie - Proletariat
Mutagen
any agent that increases the frequency or extent of mutations EX: X RAYS, toxic chemicals
symbol
anything that signifies something else lec: create a sense of order and resist chaos by building and reinforcing a larger worldview- ideas about what is real, what exists, and what it means.
symbols (FINAL)
anything that signifies something else: stands for something else: language, art, religion, politics, and economics — that covey meaning to other participants
chiedoms
autonomous political unit composed of a # of villages or communities under the permanent control of a paramount chief lec: 1) Stratified society organized by Kinship. 2) Structured method of choosing leaders from within kin groups. 3) Chief/leader performs political & economic functions. 4) Chiefs & families have high status. Social prestige, economic & political privileges. They have authority but not power. They can not coerce others but can advise, encourage & request labor and support. ex: olmecs, mexico
Monotheism (FINAL to name the 3 monotheism)
belief in one supreme deity or god ex: islam, christianity, judaism
habitus
bourdieu's term to describe the self-perceptions and beliefs that develop as part of one's social identity and shape one's conceptions of the world and where on fits in it
descriptive linguists
carefully describe spoken languages and preserve them as written language: those who analyze languages and their component parts.
authorizing process
complex historical and social developments through which symbols are given power and meaning
sexuality
complex range of desires, beliefs, and behaviors that are related to erotic physical contact and the cultural arena within which people debate about what kinds of physical desires and behaviors are right, appropriate, and natural
structural functionalism
conceptual framework positing that eau element of society serves a particular function oak rep the entire system in equilibrium
Relative dating
date the context in which the fossil was found. entails comparing the fossil to what is found nearby, including plants, animals or cultural artifacts such as stone tools whose dates have been previously established Relative dating relies on stratigraphy- process that determines the ages of the layer of sediment above and below the fossil.
absolute dating
date the fossil itself: 2 chemical assessments: Radiocarbon (carbon-14)- organic material this traces the half-life of carbon as it decays in organic matter Radiopotassium (postassium-40)- nonorganic matter this does not measure the organic material in a fossil, but the amount of argon in volcanic rock/ash found
genocide (FINAL)
deiberate and systematic destruction of an ethnic or religious group Ex: Nazi, Germany, Dar, Sudan, Native American Indian groups, United States
ethnic cleansing (FINAL)
efforts by representatives of one ethnic or religious group to remove or destroy another group in a particular geographic area *example (FINAL) is bosnia In former Yugoslavia (late 1980's) fighting between Catholic Croats, Orthodox Christian Serbs & Bosnian Muslims- saw a practice of Ethnic cleansing practiced on Bosnian Muslims.
potlach
elaborate redistribution ceremony practiced among the Kwakiutl of the pacific northwest The chief establishes and reestablishes claims to prestige and status by holding a feast and gift -giving potlatch. Gives guest from his personal possessions: food, cooking pots, blankets, weapons, and boats. The more the elaborate of the gift-giving the more status and rank the chief gained in the community, as well as applying pressure to the guests to reciprocate in like manner or more elaborately in a later ceremony.
historical particularism
idea attributed to Franz Boas that cultures develop in specific ways because of their unique histories believed you couldn't rely on a formula to explain differences among cultures but must study the particular history of each culture to see how it developed
language continuum
idea that variation in languages appears gradually over distance so that groups of people who live near one anther speak in a way that is mutually intelligible.
intersexual (FINAL)... know the other name for it too
individual who is born with a combination of male and female genitalia, gonads, and/or chromosomes
Ambilineal descent
individuals may choose to affiliate with either mother's or father's kinship group.
industrial agriculture
intensive farming practices involving mechanization and mass production 20th century, agricultural production shifted from individual farms and farmers to large corporate-run farms Use: machines, irrigation, pesticides, fertilizers.
agriculture
intensive farming strategy for food production involving permanently cultivated land: Irrigation, fertilizer, draft animals, and machinery: such as: plows and tractors provide the technology and labor for successful agriculture.
built environment
intentionally designed features of human settlement, including buildings, transportation and public service infrastructure and public spaces.
tribes
originally viewed as a culturally distinct, multi band population that imagined itself as one people descended from a common ancestor; currently used to describe an indigenous group with its own set of loyalties and leaders living to some extent outside the control of a centralized authoritative state lec: 1) Society has more formalized organization & leadership. 2) Village & Intervillage councils where members meet regularly to settle disputes & plan community activities. Councils may have coercive power over others. 3) Tribal chiefs- enforcement powers are selected formally however, still an egalitarian society with social ethics . ex: blackfeet, montana
ethnographic fieldwork Participant Observation
primary research strategy in cultural anthropology involving living with a community of people over an extended period to better understand their lives. THE HEART OF CULTURAL ANTHROPOLOGY: key anthropological reach strategy involving both participative in and observation of the daily life of the people being studied. -power to educate by 1) making what may at first seem very unfamiliar into something that ultimately seems quite familiar 2) taking what has seemed very familiar and making it seem very strange
literature review
process of reading all the available published material about a research site and/or research issues, usually done before fieldwork begins: must learn the language of the field site, search out possible contacts, and anthropologist toolkit
Genetic Drift (FINAL) <- uno the definition
process whereby one segment of a pop. is removed from the larger pool, thereby limiting the flow of genetic materials bet. the two groups. A small number of successful mutations can more easily influence the smaller population.
anoymity
provides identities of the people involved in a study by changing or minting their names or other identifying characteristics
time space compression
rapid innovation of communication and transportation technologies has transformed the way we think about space ( distance) and time: jet travel, super highways, telephone, fax machines, Internet
Franz Boas/Bronislaw Malinowski believed in same thing
rejected these two and saw the unilineal culture as being too Eurocentric, too hierarchical and lacking adequate data to support its claims. focused on developing a four field approach to anthropological research.
monogamy
relationship between only two partners
rapport
relationships of trust and familiarity developed with members of the community being studied
Stratigraphy
relative dating (relies on this): process that determines the ages of the layer of sediment above and below the fossil.
pilgrimage
religious journey to a sacred place as a sign of devotion and in search of transformation and enlightenment ex on lec: 1) Hajj- Mecca 2) Lourdes- French grotto 3) Jerusalem: Wailng Wall ex: muslims, mecca, jesus, christians, and muslims
fossils
remains of an organism that have been preserved through a natural chemical process that turns them into partially or wholly into rock: may include hair, skin, or other tissues, or even leaves, seeds, and feathers
gender ideology
set of cultural ideas, usually stereotypical about the essential character of different genders (men's and women's capabilities and value that conscious or unconsciously) that functions to promote and justify gender stratification
syntax
specific patterns and rules for constructing phrases and sentences.(we would say my pig not pig my)
quantitative data
statistical information about a community that can be measured and compared: population demographics ad economic activity
Acheulian stone tools (under Homo erectus)
stone tools associated with homo erectus, including specialized hand axes for cutting, pounding, and scaling.
Oldowan tools (under Australopithecines)
stone tools shaped for chopping and cutting found in the Olduvai Gorge and associated with Australopithecus garhi: found by Mary and Louis Leakey recovering animal bones show cut marks where stone tools were used to remove flesh from the bone. made to manipulate and adapt to the natural world around them
linguistic anthropology (FINAL)
study of human language in the past and the present
Physical anthropology
study of humans from a biological perspective, particularly focused on human evolution
morphology (said)
study of patterns and rules of how sounds combine to make morphemes
cultural anthropology
study of people's everyday lives and their communities, their behavior, beliefs, and institutions, including how people make meaning as they live, work, and play together: explore all aspects of human culture, such as war, violence, love and hate, and death, sexuality.
Anthropology (FINAL)
study of the full scope of human diversity past and present and the application of that knowledge to help people of different backgrounds better understand one another.
social mobility (bourdieu)
the moment of one's class position, upward or downward, in stratified societies
straitifcation
the uneven distribution of resources and privileges among participants in a group or culture some place ware drawn into the center of the culture while others are ignored, marginalized or annihilated power may be stratified along lines of gender, racial, class, age, family, religion, sexuality. as a result, some people are able to participate more fully in culture than others.
sexual violence
violence perpetuated through sexually related physical assaults such as rape
wharf has made modern humans so successful at survival
we learn to adapt to changing world - genetic adaptation through evolution - development adaptation during the individual life cycle - acclimatization to immediate environmental changes -cultural adaptation using tools to moderate or control the effects of the natural environment
income
what people earn from work, plus dividends and interest on investment, along with rents and royalties