Chapter 2 Anthrophology
Culture
Shared and contested. Enculturation.
Social Construction
States knowledge is always relative to its social setting.
Alfred Kroeber
Student of Frank Boas at Columbia University
Hegemony
The ability of a dominant group to create consent and agreement within a population without the use or threat of force. Men deciding women's health care.
Agency
The potential power of individuals and groups to contest cultural norms, values, symbols, mental maps of reality, institutions, and structures of power. Women's March.
Semiotics
The practice of writing and reading signs, which are embedded in our everyday life and send messages about identity, values, beliefs, and practices. Ferdinand de Saussure. Used to decode the landscape.
A globalization alternative
The slow city movement, a grassroots response to globalization, supports slow food.
Cultural Anthropology
The study of people's communities, behaviors, beliefs and institutions, including how people make meaning as they live, work, and play together.
Stratification
The uneven distribution of resources and privileges among participants in a group or culture. Can be formal like caste system in India
enculturation
We do not inherit culture but learn it through
Not understandable outside of the geographical context in which it operates. We call this a "two-way relationship"
We explore culture as a process that is
Cosmopolitanism
You are a well traveled class, and that is odd in the history of humans. Possibly too much of a focus on material consumption?
Global Consumption
a shared, global consciousness affected by cyberspace
Cognitive map
a type of mental representation which serves an individual to acquire, code, store, recall, and decode information about the relative locations and attributes of phenomena in their everyday or metaphorical spatial environment.
Homogenization
culture is not necessarily linked to a geographical location
Advertising and the mass media
tell what to consume, equating ownership of products with happiness, a good sex life, and success in general.
Culture
the enduring behaviors, ideas, attitudes, values, and traditions shared by a group of people and transmitted from one generation to the next. Language, religion, art, music, food, and attitudes.
Commercial Spaces
An example of these are malls, which are complex semiotic sites which direct important signals not only about what to buy but also about who should shop there and who should not.
Cosmopolitanism
An intellectual and aesthetic openness toward divergent experiences, images, and products from different cultures. Fosters curiosity about all places. Potentially a path to a type of world peace
Mental Maps of Reality
Assign meaning to what has been classified.
Historical Particularism
Boas also supported the idea that people have a unique history that led to their unique material and symbolic culture and is called
structural functionalism
Criticized for focusing too much on the stability of societies, downplaying the role of the individual in society, ignoring inequality based on race, gender etc that causes tension and conflict, and not truly accounting for change.
Culture Hybridization
Cultural mixing. Culture matters more than ever in the negotiation of global forces, as local forces confront globalization and translate it into unique place-specific forms. Example: Creole
material or symbolic
Culture can be
Unilineal Cultural Evolution
Culture follows a natural path, and the most mature stage of that evolution is Christian European Civilization. This idea is ethnocentric, racists, and now obsolete in Anthropology.
socially constructed
Culture is
The Super-organic
Culture is superior to nature; culture provides varying meanings to objects
Cultural Relativism
Culture should be understood as it's own thing! It does not need to be compared, contrasted, or ranked amongst others. Boas used this to study the Inuit
Ferdinand de Saussure
A Swiss linguist who coined the term semiology and stated nothing is a sign unless it is interpreted as a sign.
Advertising
A catalyst for consumption. We increasingly define ourselves by what we consume.
Quinceañera
A coming-of-age ceremony for Mexicans and Mexican-Americans that is a rite of passage based on age
Interpretivist Approach
A critique of positivism in the social sciences. Clifford Geertz, a leader in symbolic anthropology used the idea of a thick description to support this approach and attack cultural relativism
wearing a white turban
A cultural trait of mature Tuareg men in Niger
Cognitive map
A drawing representing the practice of your everyday life is a
Culture
A shared set of meanings that is lived through the material and symbolic practices of everyday life.
An Americanization of Culture
Examples include, television shows, hollywood movies, international products like Coca-Cola, Mcdonalds, and Apple, and having half the books and internet being written in English
Cyber cultures
Globalization has created this new culture.
Structural Functionalism
Isolates cultures and takes notes, highly problematic. Presents the idea that society is an organism, with each group of people fulfilling their role.
They Live
Movie about seeing the world how it is
Globalization
Possibly a homogenizing language and culture