ANTH 210 exam 2 (Lemus)
Social Control:
"those fields of the social system (beliefs, practices, and institutions) that are most actively involved in the maintenance of any norms and the regulation of any conflict"
Society:
A group of people who depend on one another for survival or well-being as well as the relationship among such people, including their status and roles
Economy:
A population's system of production, distribution, and consumption of resources.
Ritual:
A prescribed form or order for some kind of ceremony
Exogamy:
A rule requiring marriage outside of one's own social or kinship group.
Endogamy:
A rule requiring marriage within a specified social or kinship group.
Wealth:
All a person's material assets; basis of economic status.
Race:
An ethnic group assumed to have a biological basis.
Phenotype:
An organism's evident traits, its "manifest biology"—anatomy and physiology
Polytheism:
Belief in several deities who control aspects of nature.
Animism:
Belief in souls, or doubles
Pastoralism:
Caring for domesticated animals which produce both meat and milk.
Globalization:
Continuity of change in our global world
Patrilineal Descent:
Descent traced through men only
Matrilineal Descent:
Descent traced through women only
Transgender:
Describes individuals whose gender identity contradicts their biological sex at birth and the gender identity assigned to them in infancy.
Racism:
Discrimination against an ethnic group assumed to have a biological basis.
Horticulture:
Not as intensive use of land, labor and machinery
Patriarchy:
Political system ruled by men.
Forage:
Relies on food naturally available in the environment
Sexual Orientation:
Sexual attraction to persons of the opposite sex, same sex, or both sexes
hegemony:
Stratified social order in which subordinates accept hierarchy as "natural"
Anthropology:
The comparative and holistic study of human biology and culture
Gender:
The cultural construction of whether one is female, male, or something else.
Levirate:
The practice of a man marrying the widow of a deceased brother.
Sororate:
The practice of a woman marrying the husband of her deceased sister.
Gender Roles:
The tasks and activities that a culture assigns to each sex
Mode of production:
Way of organizing production—a set of social relations through which labor is deployed to wrest energy from nature by means of tools, skills, and knowledge
the state:
a centralized political unit encompassing many communities, which includes a bureaucratic structure and leaders who possess coercive power
Band:
a small group of fewer than a hundred people, all related by kinship or marriage.
Hegemony:
a stratified social order in which subordinates comply with domination by internalizing their rulers' values and accepting the "naturalness" of domination
Political Anthropology:
addresses the area of human behavior and thought related to power
Norms:
are accepted standards for how people should behave that are usually unwritten and learned unconsciously through socialization
Peasant:
are small-scale agriculturalists who live in nonindustrial states and have rent fund obligation
Social Division of Labor:
by age and gender
Agriculture:
common use of domesticated animals, irrigation, or terracing.
Differential Access:
favored access to resources by superordinates over subordinates
Clifford Geertz:
focused on interpreting the symbols that give meaning to peoples' lives.
Tribe:
have economies based on horticulture and pastoralism. Living in villages and organized into kin groups based on common descent
Chiefdom:
is a form of political organization that includes permanently allied tribes and villages under one leader
Kinship:
is the recognition of a relationship between persons based on descent or marriage.
Negative Reciprocity:
mainly in dealing with people outside or on the fringes of their social systems.
Toolmaking:
manipulating objects and is essential to a major human adaptive capacity
Sexual Division of Labor:
men (jobs) Women (housework)
capitalist mode of production:
money buys labor power, and social gap between people
kin-based mode of production:
mutual aid in production is one among many expressions of a larger web of social relations.
Redistribution:
operates when goods, services, or their equivalent move from the local level to a center.
Transhumance:
part of the group moves with the herds, but most people stay in the home village.
State Formation:
perpetual expansion is a distinguishing feature of industrial economic systems.
Phonetics:
study of sounds of human language
Power:
the ability to exercise one's will over others
Prestige:
the basis of social status—refers to esteem, respect, or approval for acts, deeds, or qualities considered exemplary.
Sex:
the biological and physiological characteristics that define men and women
Village Head:
the only leadership position (no absolute power needs to persuade)
Law:
the sense of a legal code with trial and enforcement
Horticulture:
types of plant cultivation found in nonindustrial society, which is a nonintensive, shifting cultivation.
mode of production
way of organizing production