anthro 13
Hunting-Gathering/Foraging
A type of food procurement, where the majority of food resources are wild and acquired from the surrounding environment. Can also include domestication.
Pastoralism
A type of food production with primary focus on herding domesticated animals for their meat, blood, milk, and other resources. It can be nomadic and semi-nomadic, transhumant, or otherwise mixed (agropastoralism).
Agriculture
A type of food production, specifically a reliance on domesticated plants. Anthropologists distinguish between low-input, shifting cultivation (horticulture) and high-input, intensive and continuous land use cultivation.
Market exchange
An exchange principle that puts the focus on the exchange of equivalent values within a mutually agreed-upon time frame (buying, selling, trading) and the relationships between exchange partners are deemphasized.
What do economic anthropologists mean when they say the economy is a cultural system? How does their perspective differ from that of economists?
Anthro looks at the why behind exchange and it is influenced by culture. Eco looks at the action itself Economics is a normative theory because it specifies how people should act if they want to make efficient economic decisions. In contrast, anthropology is a largely descriptive social science; we analyze what people actually do and why they do it.
A Rwandan proverb states, "A cow that goes down the hill must come back up. This proverb means that any gift received must be returned in kind. What kind of reciprocity is illustrated by this proverb and its meaning?
Balanced reciprocity
How do anthropologists understand consumption?
Consumption refers to the process of buying, eating, or using a resource, food, commodity, or service. Anthropologists understand consumption more specifically as the forms of behavior that connect our economic activity with the cultural symbols that give our lives meaning.
big idea
Culture shapes all aspects of economic life including the assignment of value, social relations like labor or property, and taste.
Which one of the following is an example an egalitarian society?
!Kung hunter-gatherers in the Kalahari desert.
Power
"The ability of individuals or groups to impose their will upon others and make them do things even against their own wants or wishes" (Haviland). "A way in which certain actions may structure the field of other possible actions" (Foucault).
How does economic anthropology define property?
property is shaped by cultural taste
What are the three modes of exchange?
reciprocity, redistribution, market exchange
technologies of power panopticon
relationship between the state and people. panopticon; a guard could watch all prisoners without knowing if they are being watched supervision means control phones,ICollege, security cameras,
Homo economicus
the "economic human nature" posited by the science of economics as rational decision making, self-interest, and maximization.
hegemony
the domination of one state or group over its allies. rule by persuasion racism wealthy people work hard, poor people are lazy polluted air
political ecology
the study of the relationships between political, economic and social factors with environmental issues and changes
How is the exchange of goods and services central to creating and perpetuating social bonds? Give examples.
they show care and love, honor.
Hegemony
Rule through persuasion, the process by which the dominant social group's values become the "commonsense" values of all.
Foraging (hunter-gathers), herding (pastoralism), farming (horticulture and agriculture), and industrial capitalism are all:
Subsistence strategies
Homo economicus is:
The universal human imagined by economists in their analysis of economic behavior.
everyday forms of resistance
The theory developed by American anthropologist, James C. Scott, which describes the ways average citizens challenge hegemony indirectly.
panopticon
The theory developed by French historian, Michel Foucault, which describes the ways modern society exercises control 1. heresy through surveillance and established norms of acceptable behavior.
hegemony
The theory developed by Italian philosopher, Antonio Gramsci, which explains how a governing power wins consent from those it subjugates without resorting to brute force alone.
Redistribution
a form of exchange in which accumulated wealth is collected from the members of the group and reallocated in a different pattern
Stratification
a society organized in formal, hierarchically arranged strata or layers of unequal power and wealth, for example, social classes.
Anthro Economics
cultural system diverse scarcity is contingent focuses on everything
What are the three phases of economic activity? How does storage impact the circulation of goods and services?
distribution production consumption buffer effects of natural forces and debts
negative reciprocity
exchange conducted for the purpose of material advantage and the desire to get something for nothing. taking advantage of someone. i forgot my wallet and not buying back
agriculture
farming
weapons of the weak everyday forms of peasant resistance
finding ways the peasants rebel the state and what they use
What are the different rules tied to gift-giving and reciprocity? How do they vary across cultures?
gifts mean different things. ending a relationship.
generalized reciprocity
giving and receiving goods with no immediate or specific return expected hitchhiking, buying a coffee for a friend
Resistance
indirect challenges to power, domination, or hegemony through oblique practices
What are the primary characteristics of intensive agriculture and agricultural societies?
intensive: plows, fertilization, tools more land, large crops, large populations
How do general cultural values about, circulation of, and acquisition of material goods impact their meaning and value?
it is culturally constructed
What are the primary characteristics of horticulture and horticultural societies?
low-intensity: simple technology and moving intensive: plows,
What are the three primary types of agriculture?
low-intensity: simple technology and moving intensive: plows, fertilization, tools more land, large crops, large populations high-intensity: large-scale, tractors, markets,
What are the primary characteristics of foraging and hunter-gatherer societies?
low-labor collecting' moving diverse high sustainability smaller populations spread out
Technologies of power
mechanisms used to manage people; the relationships between the state, the individual, and the masses.
Econonmics
natural system universal human scarcity, competition are universal exchange
How diversified are people's economic lives in reality?
not really
hunting and gathering (or foraging),
obtaining food available in nature through gathering, hunting, fishing or scavenging
What is Cronk's main argument?
our generosity is not unconditional
Define subsistence strategies:
patterns to supply basic needs of a society
Materialism
preoccupation with physical comforts and things
agency
A person's ability to act, to exert power, or to effect change in their world.
Political Ecology
An anthropological approach that traces the relationship between ecology, economy and political power in producing particular social arrangements and their consequences.
Political Economy
An anthropological approach that traces the relationship between economics and politics in producing particular social arrangements, structures and practices of equality or inequality.
Buying yourself a cup of coffee at Starbucks is an example of:
Market exchange
bid idea
Most societies pursue a mix of subsistence strategies, but their primary subsistence strategy tends to correlate with certain specific social and cultural features.
big idea
Most societies pursue a mix of subsistence strategies, but their primary subsistence strategy tends to correlate with certain specific social and cultural features.
The exchange of Christmas presents among close family or friends is an example of:
O Balanced reciprocity
The penny cup at the register in some stores is an example of:
O Generalized reciprocity
Haggling over the price of lemonade at a child's lemonade stand is an example of:
O Negative reciprocity
In "Strings Attached," Lee Cronk argues that:
O gifts have the ambivalent power to unify, antagonize, or subjugate people.
What are the three main modes of exchange and circulation and what is their significance?
Reciprocity:Studying reciprocity gives anthropologists unique insights into the moral economy, or the processes through which customs, cultural values, beliefs, and social coercion influence our economic behavior Generalized Reciprocity:his form of reciprocity occurs within the closest social relationships where exchange happens so frequently that monitoring the value of each item or service given and received would be impossible, and to do so would lead to tension and quite possibly the eventual dissolution of the relationship. Balanced Reciprocity:without reciprocation within an appropriate time frame, the exchange system will falter and the social relationship might end
The potlatch among indigenous Americans from the Northwest Coast is an example of:
Redistribution
Negative Reciprocity
The attempt to take advantage of another in exchange or get something for nothing.
industrialization
The development of industries for the machine production of goods.
Balanced Reciprocity
The exchange or offering of something with an expectation that something of equivalent value will be returned within a prescribed time frame.
Generalized Reciprocity
The exchange or offering of something without an expectation of a return or any time frame for return.
Panopticon
The original panopticon was prison design where single guard could control hundreds of prisoners because they could not know when they were being observed. According to Michel Foucault, modern society is a panopticon where individuals are controlled because they are always watched and listened to.
balanced reciprocity
a mode of exchange in which the giving and the receiving are specific as to the value of the goods and the time of their delivery rule-bound. gift giving, giving crops for helping
How does culture influence perceptions of need? Give an example.
all good are culturally construction. we do not eat grasshoppers but other societies do. sneakers
What is an example of industrial foraging in the world today?
fishing
What are the primary characteristics of mechanized agriculture and industrialized agricultural societies?
high-intensity: large-scale, tractors, markets,
What is political economy and why does it matter?
his approach recognizes that the economy is central to everyday life but contextualizes economic relations within state structures, political processes, social structures, and cultural values.
What is the anthropological view of the economy? How does it differ from the discipline of economics?
humans adapt to their environments, more than meeting basic needs, household management
What are the four primary subsistence strategies?
hunting and gathering (or foraging), pastoralism, low-intensity horticulture, high-intensity agriculture, and industrialization,
Redistribution
the accumulation of goods or labor to a central location (person, group of institution) and recirculation back out based on a specific rule or pattern. It may be a force for equalizing (downward redistribution) or aggravating (upward redistribution) wealth disparities.
market exchange
the buying and selling of goods and services, with prices set by rules of supply and demand
Pastoralism
the domestication of animals
What is an example of industrial pastoralism in the world today?
varied climates different levels of mobility all over the globe wealth and trade
What are the primary characteristics of industrial capitalism and industrialized societies?
wage labor large populations urbanization markets technology