What is Cultural Anthropology?
Connotation
All the meanings, associations, or emotions that a word suggests
non-material culture
Human creations, such as values, norms, knowledge, systems of government, language, and so on, that are not embodied in physical objects
Artifacts
Items that have been made, used, or modified by human beings.
Primates
Members of the mammalian order Primates, which includes lemurs, lorises, tarsiers, monkeys, apes, and humans.
Fossils
Preserved remains of once-living organisms
Primary Sources
Primary sources provide first-hand testimony or direct evidence concerning a topic under investigation. They are created by witnesses or recorders who experienced the events or conditions being documented.
Holism
The anthropological commitment to consider the full scope of human life, including culture, biology, history, and language, across space and time.
Acculturation
The process of adjusting to a secondary culture that is different from your own.
Adaptation
The process of species adjusting to better fit their environments through evolution.
Linguistic Anthropology
The study of human language in the past and present.
Anthropology
The study of humans
folklore
The traditional beliefs, myths, tales, and practices of a people, transmitted orally.
Applied Anthropology
The use of anthropological knowledge and methods to solve practical problems.
Moral Relativism
The view that there is no absolute or universal moral law or truth, resulting in a morality determined by cultural factors or personal preference.
Cultural Resource Management (CRM)
a professional field that conducts activities, including archaeology, related to compliance with legislation aimed at conserving cultural resources
prejudice
an unjustifiable (and usually negative) attitude toward a group and its members. Prejudice generally involves stereotyped beliefs, negative feelings, and a predisposition to discriminatory action.
sign
anything that is used to represent something else.
empirical
based on observation or experiment
Norms
cultural rules of right and wrong
Physical Anthropology
focuses on anatomy in its study of human evolution and variation.
Evolution
genetic change in species over generations
cultural relativism
not judging a culture but trying to understand it on its own terms
material culture
tangible, physical items produced and used by members of a specific culture group and reflective of their traditions, lifestyles, and technologies
Forensic Archaeology
the application of archaeological and bioarchaeological knowledge for legal purposes
Cultural Anthropology
the comparative, cross-cultural study of human society and culture
natural history
the description and classification of all forms of life.
biological determinism
the idea that people's thoughts and actions are driven by inherited genetic factors.
Culture
the learned behaviors, ideas, attitudes, and traditions shared by a large group of people and transmitted from one generation to the next. It is the primary non-biological strategy that humans use for coping with the environment.
Denotation
the literal meaning of a word
Ethnocentrism
the practice of judging other cultures by the standards of your own.
Enculturation
the process by which one's native cultures is/are learned and transmitted across the generations
Genetics
the study of DNA, the molecule that provides the blueprint for life.
Biological Anthropology
the study of human biological variation in time and space
Archaeology
the study of the past based on what people left behind
Interpretant
the term that C.S. Peirce used to refer to the connection that is made between the sign, or representamen, and its object.
Object
the term that C.S. Peirce used to refer to the thing that a sign represents.
icon
the type of sign that represents something because it bears a resemblance to it.
Index
the type of sign that represents something because it has a real physical relationship to it.
critical thinking
thinking that does not blindly accept arguments and conclusions. Rather, it examines assumptions, discerns hidden values, evaluates evidence, and assesses conclusions.
indigenous
those who are first or native to an area and cannot be said to have descended from immigrants.