Anthropology Exam II
calendrical rituals
A ritual that is performed on a regular basis as part of a religious calendar.
Hawaiian kinship system
Accounts for gender and generation. Does not account for lineal vs collateral or paternal vs maternal.
Iroquios kinship system
Accounts for gender, generation, and sex linking of relative. Does not account for lineal vs collateral or paternal vs maternal
Minangkabau
Agriculture W. Sumatra Malaysia Matrilineal
Samoans
Agriculture, fishing S. Hawaii Cognatic (Ambilocal)
Animism
Belief that objects, such as plants and stones, or natural events, like thunderstorms and earthquakes, have a discrete spirit and conscious life.
grammatical competence
Competent in semantics (word meaning), syntax (word order/combination).
Yanomamo
Foraging, horticulture Brazil Patrilineal
Anthony Wallace (on religion)
Forms of religious practices
Azande
Horticulture, hunting Central Africa-Sudan Patrilineal
Sapir-Whorf Hypothesis Example
Kinship terms and how they differ based on the society's form of kinship
US Models of a Family
-2 kids -Parents -Pet
Japanese Models of Family
-2-3 Kids -Grandparents -Parents -Hierarchy
Native american third genders
-A third or fourth gender of "man-woman" or "woman man" or "not woman-not man" -Well documented among Native Americans -More than 150 NAtive American cultures had cross-gender -Cross gender work or activities -Transvestism (dressing like the other gender) -Associations with spiritual powers -Same-sex relationships and marriage -Same GENDER was not allowed
Example of miscommunication due to cultural differences
-Asking about GPA -Twins in Japan
three characteristics of religion
-Beliefs about nature and character of supernatural powers -Teachings or traditions which tell of these supernatural powers -Rituals intended to include or direct these powers for the benefit of the group
individualistic
-Emphasize direct personal interactions between people and the supernatural -You don't need a priest or anything to help you contact the supernatural -Ojibwa
ecclesiastical
-Highly organized religious practices which a full-time priesthood performs rituals believed to benefit believers or the whole society; occur in complex societies -Priest has to be trained -Hierarchy (pope, bishop, priest) -Strict rules -Officially become a member
communal
-Member of a particular group gather periodically for rituals that are believed to benefit the group as a whole -Ju/'honsai trance dances
Shamanistic religion
-Some individuals are believed to have contact with the supernatural that ordinary people lack -Shaman a part-time religious person
duolocal residence
Married couple lives in two separate households
Polyandry
a form of marriage in which women have more than one husband
patrilocal residence
a residence pattern in which a married couple lives in the husband's father's place of residence
matrilocal residence
a residence pattern in which a married couple lives in the wife's mother's place of residence
ambilocal residence
a residence pattern in which a married couple may choose either matrilocal or patrilocal residence
Crisis Ritual
a ritual performed irregularly, as needed, such as weddings, prayers for rain, and healing ceremonies
communicative competence
a speaker's internalized knowledge both of the grammatical rules of a language and of the rules for appropriate use in social contexts.
bilateral kinship
a system in which individuals trace their descent through both parents. (America, Ju'/Honsai)
Patrilineal
based on or tracing descent through the male line (Yanomamo, Basseri, Azande)
Why does the definition of marriage not work cross culutrally?
because some cultures don't marry for romance or live together and some consider that being marriage
polytheism
belief in more than one god
Monotheism
belief in only one god
Involvement Politeness
emphasizes solidarity through interaction (jokes, stories, small talk)
Ojibwa
foragers Canada Patrilineal
Ju/'honsai
foraging S. Africa- Kalahari Bilateral
Trobriand Islanders
horticulture Trobriand Islands Matrilineal
Eskimo kinship system
kinship reckoning in which the nuclear family is emphasized by specifically identifying the mother, father, brother, and sister, while lumping together all other relatives into broad categories such as uncle, aunt, and cousin; also known as a lineal system. Accounts for gender,generation, lineal, but not paternal vs maternal.
neolocal residence
living arrangement in which a married couple sets up residence separate from either spouse's family
polygny
man has more than one wife (Ojibwa- allowed but not common)
Endogamy
marriage between people of the same social category
Exogamy
marriage outside the tribe, caste, or social group
Dowry
property or money brought by a bride to her husband on their marriage
Independence politeness style
recognizes others negative face wants, emphasizes freedom and autonomy
Matrilineal
relating to a social system in which family descent and inheritance rights are traced through the mother. (Minangkabau, Trobrianders)
mana
religious power or energy that is concentrated in individuals or objects
avunculocal residence
system under which a married couple lives with the husband's mother's brother
Bridewealth
the gift of goods or money from the groom's family to the bride's family as part of the marriage process
Brideservice involves __________.
the groom working for the bride's family
Sapir-Whorf Hypothesis
the idea that language structures thought and that ways of looking at the world are embedded in language
Cognatic
tracing through either the male or female line. (Somoans)
Basseri
Pastoralist S. Iran Patrilineal
rites of passage
Social rituals that mark the transition between developmental stages, especially between childhood and adulthood.