Anthropology Exam #2
Gender
The different ways of men and women are socially defined and evaluated. How society describes a man and a women
General purpose money
-Incorporates all six functions -Our money (but limits exist)
Limited purpose money
-Incorporates some functions -Banana bundles/Yams -Salt Rods/Raffia Cloth -Cattle
Why do biological fathers stop providing parental care? (based on notes and ready by Hewlett and Macfarlan on fathering)
-Because fathers' have low certainty that the child is his -Other kin are available to raise children -Residence rules cause father's to live away from their children
4 major elements of kinship
1. Descent 2. Marriage 3. Terminology 4. Residence
Avuncular
2 moves: -Virilocal: wife moves in with husband & they produce children (nuclear family) -Avunculocal: Mature male children move in with MB Benefits: Keeps male of the same matriline together
Dollar Bill in the US
According to the lecture notes, which is not an example of a limited purpose money?
1.Patrilocal: husband stays with his kin and wife moves in -Virilocal: wife moves in with husband 2.Matrilocal: wife stays with her kin and husband moves in -Uxorilocal: husband moves in with wife 3.Neolocal: Both husband and wife move away from both kins and start a new family (nuclear family) 4.Natalocal:Husband & wife live with respective natal kin group -Brothers take care of sister's children 5.Ambilocal: Both husband and wife life near/between both kins 6.Avunculocal: 2 moves -Virilocal: wife moves in with husband -Avunculocal: husband moves in with his mother's brother
6 Residence rules & define
TRUE
A major different between clans and lineages is that in a clan people do not know al of the connections between individuals and the founder is often mythical
In terms of: -What can be paid -Who can use it -When it should be used -How it is used
All cultures have economic systems. This means all cultures have rules specifying
Reciprocity: give something -expect return Redistribution: give something -Authority tells Exchange: give something -get something else Altruism: give something -expect nothing in return
All societies circulate goods. Name three primary mechanisms for circulation goods
Residence
Among whom one actually lives Determines -Where you sleep -With whom you eat -Majority of social interactions
Money is power
Away to demand goods/services from others
Competitive altruism because if an individual helps another person, then the other person feels obligated to help them back. Dominican Labor Exchange has Chief For a Day, where one is a chief and others help them, and this goes for every individual in the group. People rely on Labor Exchange because it provides better relationships with others and creates a good reputation
Based on the lecture about Dominican Labor Exchange, what mechanism best explained labor exchange: Reciprocity or Competitive Altruism? Why do you say that? Why do people rely on Labor Exchange even if cash is present?
Patrilocal & Matrilocal
Benefit: Greater social affiliation between & within generations Disadvantage: limited autonomy
According to the lecture notes on the Sambia of New guinea, for boys to become men they must undergo ____
Boy-insemination
Kula is largely a mole activity that involves separate islands to have interconnected network of trade. Armshells and necklaces are traded. Usually it would involve 3 partners: you and 2 others. One will want an armshell or amband and will trade it for an equal value necklace and the other one will want a necklace and will exchange it for equal value armshell/band. People participate in Kula to form relationships with others on separate islands, to achieve goods that aren't found on their homeland, and to create a reupation. The goal for Kula is to form friendships, have many partners, get birth often, and to make a name in history.
Briefly describe the Kula exchange system. Why do people participate in Kula?
Tracking people through ancestors
Cognatic - Through mom and dad Patrilineal - through males Matrilineal- through females
Gender schema
Cognitive mechanism dedicated to categorizing & structuring our experiences related to societal sex roles
Rivalrous goods
Consumption by one party prevents simultaneous consumption by others
Neolocal
Couple leaves family of origin and start new household Benefit: Relative autonomy from kin Disadvantage: -Difficulty motivating work from others -Greater social distance
Ambilocal
Couple live near kin either of groom or bride
Male provisioning hypothesis
Dad contribute directly to child wellbeing Dad contribute to mom's wellbeing
How is the matriline (dala) maintained/regenerated?
Dead spirit (Baloma) finds a woman of the same dala and enters her
Sexual attraction
Desire for sexual contact with another
Sex
Determined chromosomally Differentiated hormonally Cognitions & behavior are modulated by hormones
Substantivist Economics
Economies are imbedded within a culture The substance of the economy
Kula
Exchange of armshells for an equally valued necklace Largely male activity that links separate islands into an interconnected Each participant is linked to 2 others
Based on chromosomal structure alone, there are only two sexes in humans
FALSE
Co-sleeping is rare across human cultures, as well as across most species of apes
FALSE
In Trobriand society sexual relationships are very open for adults, but relatively restrained in children
FALSE
In matrilineal societies, such as the Trobrianders, fathers have limited to no emotional or economic roles over biologic children
FALSE
Nondisjunction
Failure of chromosomes to separate during cell division
Cross cousin
Father's sister's kids Mother's brother's kids
Male mating competition hypothesis
Fathering pays when cost of switching partners is too high Pair bonding is mate guarding Polygyny Should occur in areas with Male-Biased Sex Ratios
Matrifocality refers to a socio-economic condition
Females are the center of households Males are socially marginal to households That facilitates life under poverty and economic uncertainty That is found in many Afro-Caribbean societies
Sambia Gender: Female
Females born with all vital organs and fluids to become reproductively competent Active TINGU (menstrual blood organ) causes early motor coordination and speech, later rapid attainment of height and secondary sex characters
Hawaiian
Gender & Generation Emphasizes sameness on Mom's & Dad's family
Hawaii kinship terminology places emphasis on which categories
Gender and Generation
Iroquois
Gender, generation & lineality -Distinguishes on basis of relatedness to mom or dad Strongly associated with unilineal descent Emphasizes parallel vs cross-cousins
Eskimo
Gender, generation & nuclearity Separates immediate nuclear family from others Ignores gender at various levels away from nuclear
Sundanese
Gender, generation, nuclearity & lineality Fully descriptive kinship terminology Occurs in complex, stratified societies
Redistribution
Give stuff away because authority says so
Exchange
Give stuff away to get another thing
Altruism
Give stuff away, expect nothing
Reciprocity
Give stuff away, get it later
Phratry
Grouping of clans
Sexual Orientation
Habitual & enduring preference for one or more gender/sex practice
Natolocal
Husband & wife live with respective natal kin group -Brothers take care of sister's children
Patrilocal
Husband stays with his family and wife moves in Virilocal: wife moves to husband's residence
The woman's brother makes the yam garden for her husband. Her husband then rewards brother after yam harvested. (Yams represents wealth for the husband; Yam houses are bank accounts). Husband supports wife by using yams to get more banana bundle leaves for her, for funerary distributions. The relationship between brother and husband is important. If it's strong, then there is more wealth.
In Trobriand society, a woman, her husband, and her brother form an economic unit. Describe what each male provides to this economic unit.
Exludable goods
Individuals can be excluded from consuming good
Human Life History
Infancy- 3 yrs Childhood-3.5-5.5yrs Juvenile-5.5-10yrs Adolescent-10-19yrs Adult
Co-sleeping
Infants sleep with parents (especially mothers); danger avoidance; teach infant how to breathe, and generate heat for babies
Matrilineal descent
Inheritance through female side Matrilineage Requires daughters Men still in control Tend to practice matrilocality or avuncularity
Patrilineal descent
Inheritance through male side Require sons Tend to be patrilocal Patrilineage
Marriage
It links group, especially in unilineal system Really about propagating the lineal group & organizing alliances between lineages
Lineage
Know all of the connections between individuals Founding members is known + non-mythical Provides grounded genealogical connections
Pair Bonding
Long-term affiliation of two individuals
Sambia Gender: Male
Males must achieve masculinity No Tingu Have Kere-ku-kereku (semen organ) -Is only a vessel, cannot produce fluids -Only insemination "fills the vessel" -One must receive jerungdu
1.Quantifiable 2.Fungible 3.Durability 4.Portibility 5.Divisibility 6.Recognizible
Many human societies use money. What are 6 desirable traits associated with money?
Exogamy
Marry outside group
Endogamy
Marry within group
Money Functions
Means of payment Medium of exchange Standard of value Store of value/wealth Standard of Deferred payment Unit of Account
Unplanned Economy
More demand/$ for a good More supply is generated because of increased capital Increasing demand allows suppliers to increase price Which means less money placed into alternative goods/services Goal is to create wealth for owners/shareholders Bottom Up process
Parallel cousin
Mother's sister's kids Father's brother's kids
Clan
Not knowing the connections between individuals Founding member is unknown or mythical - Totem Provides general idea of relatedness
Common property
Owner: Collective Duties: Objectives set by group Owner rights: control access to members, exclude all others
Private property
Owner: Individual/firm Duties: avoid socially unacceptable uses Owner rights: control access to members, exclude all others
Open Access
Owner: None Owner duties: None Owner rights: Total
State property
Owner: State Duties: objectives set by state Owner Rights: determine rules of exclusion and use
Allomothers
People who helps raised the children besides mothers Dads, grand-moms, other adult kin, juveniles & adolescents
Which marriage type is practiced across most human societies?
Polygyny
3 types of marriages
Polygyny: 1 male, multiple females Polyandry: 1 female, multiple males Monogamy: 1 female, 1 male
Chief For a Day
Private goods produced through collective action
Cognatic descent
Relatedness to others based on an ancestor, not ego
Gender identity
Sense of belonging to a particular gender role
Cooperative Breeder
Sex -Involves at least two individuals Birthing -Is a social act Childcare & parenting -Children are born altricial -Growth & development are subsidized by others
Sexual culture
Shared values/meanings associated with sexual behaviors
Sexual scripts/Schema
Socially constructed lines or roles people enact
Command economy
State agencies determine what should be created and in what amount Prices are set a priori to manage action of people to achieve state goals Goal is to maximize profits for state, not industry Top Down process
Dominican society
Subsistence: Horicultural Residence rule: Descent Rule: Patrilineage Marriage: Monogamy
Feminine
The ideal cluster of traits society attributes to females
Masculine
The ideal cluster of traits society attributes to males
Paternity Certainty
The more certain dad is the child is his, the more dad & other paternal kin provide care
Circulation
The movement of goods
Formalist Economics
The study of choice under conditions of scarcity or uncertainty
Economic Anthropology
The study of unity and diversity of human choices under conditions of scarcity and uncertainty
Gendered division of Labor
The tendency for productive work to be performed by one sex and not the other
Kinship system
The way societies organize themselves
Unilineal descent
Tracing inheritance through a single line Removes ambiguity about group membership
Horicultural (Yams) Avunculocal Matrilineal Hamlet exogamy -Leaders/chiefs can do polygyny while the res is monogamy
Triobriand society Subsistence: Residence Rule: Descent Rule: Marriage:
Iroquois kinship termology strongly reflects which
Unilineal Descent
Competitive altruism
Variation in cooperative abilities Preference for highly cooperative people Reputations are salient Market place for social relationships
According to the movie, "Kingdom of Women," which marriage and residence system did the Mosuo of China practice?
Walking marriage and Natalocal Residence
Labor exchange
When money isn't available, exchanges work/labor for work
Matrilocal
Wife stays with her family & husband moves in Uxorilocal: husband moves to wife's residence
Festive labor
Work performed irregularly Large labor force Host does not give work back Feast of food & alcohol