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Exam 1 Cultural Anthropology
N/A
137
Anthropology
Undergraduate 1
02/12/2013

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Term
Anthropology
Definition
The comparitive study of human societies and cultures
Term
Holistic/Holism
Definition
In anthropology an approach that considers culture, history, language, and biology essential to a complete understanding of human society
Term
Society
Definition
A goup of people who depend on one another for survival or well-being as well as the relationships among such people, including their status and roles
Term
Culture
Definition
The learned behaviors and symbols that allow people to live in groups.  The primary means by which humans adapt to their environment.  The way of life characteristic of a particular human society
Term
Ethnography
Definition
A description of society or culture.
Term

Emic

(Perspective)

Definition
Examining society using concepts, categories, and distinctions that are meaningful to members of that culture.
Term

Etic

(perspective)

Definition
Examining society using concepts, categories, and rules derived from science, an outsider's perspective, which produces analyses that members of the society being studied may not find meaningful
Term
Ethnology
Definition
The attempt to find general principles or laws that govern cultural phenomena
Term
Cultural Anthropology
Definition
The study of human thought, meaning, and behavior that is learned rather than genetically transmitted, and that is typical of groups of people
Term
Ethnohistory
Definition
Description of the cultural past based on written records, interviews, and archaeology
Term
Linguistic Anthropology
Definition
A brach of linguistics concerned with understanding language and its relation to culture
Term
Historical linguists
Definition
Study relationships among languages to better understand the histories and migrations of those who speak them
Term
Archaeology
Definition
The subdiscipline of anthropology that focuses on the reconstruction of past cultures based on their material remains
Term
Prehistoric
Definition
Societies for which we have no usable written records
Term
Artifact
Definition
Any object made or modified by human beings.  Generally used to refer to objects made in past cultures
Term
Urban archaeology
Definition
The archeological investigation of towns and cities as well as the process of urbanization
Term
Cultural Resource management (CRM)
Definition
The protection and management of archaeological, archival, and architectural resources
Term
Biological Anthropology
Definition
The subdiscipline of anthropology that studies people from a biological perspective, focusing primarily on aspects of humankind that are genetically inherited.  It includes osteology, nutrition, demography, epidemiology, and primatology
Term
Paleoanthropology
Definition
The subdiscipline of anthropology concerned with tracing evolution of humankind in the fossil record
Term
Human Variation
Definition
The subdiscipline of anthropology concerned with mapping and explaining physical differences among modern human groups
Term
Primate
Definition
A member of a biological order of mammals that includes human beings, apes, and monkeys as well as prosimians (lemurs, tarsiers, and others)
Term
Medical Anthropolgy
Definition
A subfield of cultural anthropology concerned with the way sin which disease is understood and treaded in different cultures
Term
Applied Anthropology
Definition
The application of anthropology to the solution of human problems
Term
Indigenous Peoples
Definition
Societies that have occupied a region for a long time and are recoginized by other groups as its original inhabitants
Term
Forensic Anthropology
Definition
The application of biological anthropology to the identification of skeletalized or badly decomposed human remains
Term
Ethnocentrism
Definition
Judging other cultures from the perspective of one's own culture.  The notion that one's own culture is more beautiful, rational, and nearer to perfection than any other
Term
Anomie
Definition
A situation where social or moral norms are convused or entirely absent; often caused by rapid social change
Term
Racism
Definition
The belief that some human populations are superior to others because of inherited, genetically transmitted characteristics
Term
Cultural Relativism
Definition
The notion that cultures should by analyzed with reference to their own histories and values, in terms of the cultural whole, rather than according to the vales of another culture
Term
Biopsychological Equality
Definition
The notion that all human groups have the same biological and mental capabilities
Term
What is the definition of anthropology?
Definition
The comparitive study of human societies and cultures.  Its goal is to descripe, analyze, and explain different cultures, to show how groups have adapted to their environments and given significance to their lives
Term
In what ways is anthropology holistic?
Definition
It combines the study of human biology, history, and the learned and shared patterns of human behavior and thought we call culture in order to analyze human groups
Term
What are 5 subdisciplines of anthropology?
Definition
Cultural anthropology, linguistics, archaeology, biological anthropology, and applied antrhopology
Term
What is the focus of cultural anthro?
Definition
The learned and shared ways of behaving typical of a particular human group
Term
What is the focus of linguistic anthro?
Definition
Examines history, structure, and variation of human language
Term
What si the focus of archaeology?
Definition
Try to reconstruct past culutres through the study of their material remains
Term
What is the focus of biological anthro?
Definition
Study humankind from a biological perspective, focusing on evolution, human variation, skeletal analysis, primatology, as well as other facets of human biology
Term
What do applied anthropologists do?
Definition
Are trained in one of the other subfields.  They use anthropological research techniques to solve social, political, and economic problems for governments and other organizations
Term
Name some cirtical issues that concern cultural anthropologists.
Definition
Ethnocentrism, cultural relativism, race, and globalization
Term
What is ethnocentrism and what is its importance in the study of different cultures?
Definition
Ethnocentrism is the notion that one's own culture is superior to all others.  Anthropologists fidn that ethnocentrism is common among almost all people and may serve important rules in society.  However, anthropology also shows the problems of judging other people through the narrow perspective of one's own culture
Term
What is cultural relativism and is it the same as moral relativism?
Definition
Cultural relativism is the belief that cultures must be understood as the products of their own histories, rather than judged by comparison with eachother or with our own culture.  Cultural relativism differs from moral relativism; understanding cultures on their own terms does not necessarily imply approval of them
Term
What is the anthropological perspecitve on race?
Definition
Anthro. demonstrates that race is not a valid scientific category, but rather an important social and cultural construct.
Term
How have anthropolists responded to the increasing interconnections among people throughout the world?
Definition
Anthropologists are deeply concerneed with documenting and understanding the ways in which global economic, social, and political processes affect local culture throughout the world.  Anthropologists have often been involved in advancing the rights and interests of native peoples
Term
Clinal distribution
Definition
The frequency change of a particular trait (race) as you move geographically from 1 point to another
Term
Ethnography
Definition
The major research tool of cultural anthropology; includes both fieldwork among people in society and the written results of fieldwork
Term
Ethnocentrism
Definition
Judging other cultures from the perspective of one's own culture.  The notion that one's own culture is more beautiful, rational, and nearer to perfection than others
Term
Cultural Relativism
Definition
The notion that cultures should be analyzed with reference to their own histories and values, in terms of the cultural whole, rather than according to the values of another culture
Term
Fieldwork
Definition
The firsthand, systematic exploration of a society.  It involves living with a group of people and participating and observing their behavior
Term
Participant observation
Definition
The fieldwork technique that involves gathering cultural data by observing people's behavior and participating in their lives
Term
Institutional Review Board (IRB)
Definition
A committee organized by a university or other research institution that approves, monitors, and reviews all research that involves human subjects
Term
Culture shock
Definition
Feelings of alienation taht result from rapid immersion in a new and different culture
Term
Emic perspective
Definition
Examing a society usign concepts and distinctions that are meaningful to members of that culture
Term
Etic perspective
Definition
Examining societies using concepts, categories, and rules derived from science; an outsider's perspective which produces analyses that members of the society being studied may not find meaningful
Term
Informant (consultant)
Definition
A person from whom an anthropologist gathers data
Term
Ethnology
Definition
The attempt to find general principles or laws that govern cultural phenomena
Term
Human Relations Area Files (HRAF)
Definition
An ethnographic database that includes descriptions of more than 300 cultures and is used for cross-cultural research
Term
Postmodernism
Definition
A theoretical perspective focusing on issues of power and voice.  Postmodernists suggest that anthropological accounts are partial truths reflecting the background, training, and social position of their authours
Term
Collaborative anthropology
Definition
Ethnography that gives priority to informants on the topic, methodology, and written results of research
Term
Engaged Antrhopology
Definition
Anthro. that includes political action as a major goal of fieldwork
Term
Native anthropologist
Definition
An anthropologist who does fieldwork in his or her own culture
Term
Informed consent
Definition
The requirement that participants in anthropological studies should understnad the ways in which their participation and the realease of the research data are likely to affect them
Term
When did anthropology begin as an academic discipline and what were the methods and goals of early anthropologists
Definition
Anthropology began in the 19th century.  In that era, anthropologists were compilers of data rather than fieldworkers.  Their goal was to descirbe and document the evolutionary history of human society. There were numerous problems with their data and methods
Term
Who was Franz Boas and what role did he play in American anthropology?
Definition
Franz Boas was a German trained social scientist.  In the United States, Franz Boas established a style of anthropolgy that rejected evolutionism.  Boas insisted that anthropologists collect data through participant observation.  He argued that cultures were the result of their own history and could not be compared to one another, a position called cultural relativism
Term
Who was Bronislaw Malinowski and what rold did he play in anthropology?
Definition
Bronislaw Malinowski was a British trained anthropologist whose approach and fieldwork were critical in establishing anthropology in Britain.  Although the focus of Malinowski's work was different from Boas's, both emphasized participant observation and both saw members of other cultures as fully rational and worthy of respect
Term
How is reasearch in anthro. today different from research in the early 20th century?
Definition
Almost all anthropologists today do fieldwork, and many continue to work in small communties.  Most focus on answering specific questions rather than desciribing entire societies.  Anthropological techniques inclue participant observation, interviews, questionnaires, and mapping.
Term
What is participant observation?
Definition
The technique of gathering data on human cultures by living among the people, observing their social interaction on an ongoing daily basis, and participating as much as possible in their lives.  This intensive field experience is the methodological hallmark of cultural anthro.
Term
What are the emic and etic perspectives?
Definition
Anthropologists using the emic perspective seek to understand how culutres look from the inside.  Their goal is to enable cultural ousiders to gain a sense of what it might be like to be a member of the culture.  Anthropoligsts using an etic perspective seek to derive prinicples or rules that explain the behavior of members of a culture.  Etic research is judged by the usefulness of the hypotheses it generates and the degree to which it accurately describes behavior, not by whether or not members of the culture studied agree with its conclusions
Term
What is the Human Relations Area Files (HRAF) and what is it used for?
Definition
The HRAF is a database of information on more than 300 cultures.  It is used for coss-cultural research.  Cross-cultural researchers attempt to compare cultures to derive laus or principles that can be applied to many different cultures
Term
What is feminist antrhopology and what is its importance in the development of anthropological thinking?
Definition
Most anthropology before the late 1960s focused on men's lives.  In the 1960s feminist anthropology was a movement to change the focus of anthro. to inclue all people and to increase the number of female anthropologists.  Began a trend of thinking about both the structure of anthropology as a discipline and the role of gender, power, and voice in society.
Term
What is postmodernism and how did it affect anthropology?
Definition
Postmodernism is a theoretical position focusing on the role of power and voice in shaping society and research.  Postmodernists urged anthropologists to become more sensitive to these issues.  Postmodernists alos held that the objective world was unknowalbe and anthropologists' voice uncertain.  Postmodernism created intense debate within anthropology but ultimately enriched ethnography
Term
What are engaged and collaborative anthropology?
Definition
Collaborative anthropologists take great pains to involve members of the groups they study in the production of ethnographic knowledge.  Engaged anthropologists lace speical emphasis on the political dimesoins of their work and combine fieldwork with political and social activism
Term
What are native anthropologists and what special advantages and problems do they have?
Definition
Native anthropologists are those who study their own society.  Native anthropologists may have advantages of access and rapport.  However, in some cases, they also experience burdens more intensely, wuch as whether to expose aspects of the culture that may be received unfavorably by outsiders.
Term
What are some ethical dilemmas that face anthropologists?
Definition
Anthropological ethics require protecting the dignity, privacy, and anonymity of the people one studies as well as obtaining their informed consent.  However, it is not not clear that this can be accomplished in all cases.  In places of violence and instability, anthropoligists may not have the power or knowledge necessary to provide such protection.
Term
What is the importance of anthropology in an increasingly globalized world?
Definition
Anthropologists are increasingly enmeshed in a global society.  Those they study are rarely isolated and are often quite knowledgeable about anthropology.  Anthropological knowledge is often important in the ways people understand their identity, as such, in increasingly politcal
Term
Enculturation
Definition
The process of learning to be a member of a particular cultural group
Term
Culture and Personality theory
Definition
An anthropological perspective that focuses on culture as the principle force in shaping the typical personality of a society as well as on the role of personality in the maintenance of cultural institutions.
Term
Ethoscience
Definition
A theoretical approach that focuses on the ways in which members of a culture classify their world and holds that anthro. should be the study of cultural systems of classification
Term
Cognitive anthropology
Definition
A theoretical approuach that defines culture in terms of the rules and meanings underlying human behavior, rather than behavior itself
Term
Ethnobotany
Definition
A field of anthropological research focused on describing the ways in which different cultures classify and understand plants
Term
Ethnomedicine
Definition
A field of anthropological research devoted to describing the medical systems and practices in different cultures
Term
Structural anthropology
Definition
A theoretcial perspectie that holds that all cultures reflect similar deep, underlying patterns and that anthrpologists should attmept to decipher these patterns
Term
Symbol
Definition
Something that stands for something else
Term
Interpretive (symbolic) Anthropology
Definition
A theoretical approach that emphasizes culture as a system of meaning and proposes that the aim of cultural anthropology is to interpret the meanings that cultural acts have for their participants
Term
Functionalism
Definition
The anthropological theory that specific cultural institutions function to support the structure of society or seve the needs of individuals in society
Term
neo-Marxism
Definition
A theoretical perspective concerned with applying the insights of Marxist thought to anthropology; neo-marxists modify marxist analysis to make appropriate to the investigation of small-sclae, non-Western societies
Term
ecolocigal functionalism
Definition
A theoretical perspective that holds that the ways in which cultural institutions work can best be understood by examining theif effects on the environment
Term
Norm
Definition
An ideal pattern that influences behavior in a society
Term
Value
Definition
A culturally defined idea of what is true, right, and beautiful
Term
Subculture
Definition
A system of perceptions, values, beliefs, and customs that are significantly different from those of a larger, dominant culture within the same society
Term
Adaptation
Definition
A change in the biological structure or lifeways of an individual or population by which it becomes better fitted to survive and reproduce in its environment
Term
Pasticity
Definition
The ability of humans to change their behavior in response to a wide range of environmental demands
Term
Cultural ecology
Definition
A theoretical approach that regards cultural patterns as adaptive responses to use the basic problems of human survival and reproduction
Term
Cultural materialism
Definition
A theoretical perspective that holds taht the primary task of anthropology is to account for the similarities and differences among cultures and that this can best be done by studying the material constraints to which human existence is subject
Term
neo-evolutionism
Definition
A theoretical perspective concerned with historical change of culture from small-scale societies to extremely large-scale societies
Term
Sociobiology
Definition
A theoretical perspective that explores the relationship between human cultural behavior and genetics
Term
Innovation
Definition
A new variation on an existing cultural pattern that is subsequently accepted by other members of the society
Term
Diffusion
Definition
The spread of cultural elements from one culture to another through cultural contact
Term
Transculturation
Definition
The transformation of adopted cultural traits resulting in new cultural forms
Term
What might human beings without culture be like?
Definition
No humans can truely be said to be without culture but people with autism guve us insight into what having culture differently than others might be like
Term
Define culture
Definition
The learned, symbolic, at least partially adaptive, and ever-changing patterns of behavior and meaning shared by members of a group
Term
Describe the importancee of learning in human cultural behavior
Definition
At a basic level, culture is learned behavior. For most humans, almost all behavior is at least partially learned, even though things such as eating are biological necessitites involve culture learning.
Term
Describe the importance of symbols in human cultural behavior.
Definition
Cultures are symbolic systems, mental templates for organizing the world.  Every culture has a system of classification through which its people identify and organize the aspects of the world that are important to them.  Culture is also a collection of symbols and meaning that permit us to understand others, understand ourselves, and experience our humanity
Term
In what ways are cultures like biological organisms and whar are the problems with this organic anology?
Definition
Cultures, like biological organisms, can be thought of as systems composed of interrelated parts.  Changes in one aspect of culture result in other changes as well.  However, unlike biological organisms, conflicts between different elements of culture are found in all cultural systems.  If culture is a system, its parts do not fit together easily or well.
Term
What are norms and value?  Do people within a culture agree upon them?
Definition
Norms are shared ideas about the way things ought to be done.  Values are shared ideas about what is true, right, and beautiful.  Norms and values are not necessarly consistent and may not be shared in the same way by all members of a culture.  Individuals and groups manipulate them, renegotiate them, and battle over them.  Norms and values involve conflict and subjugation as well as accommodation and consensus.
Term
How is culture similarto the biological adaptations of non human animals to their environments?
Definition
Many anthropologists understand culture as the major adaptve mechanism of the human species.  Whereas other animals adapt primarily through biological mechanisms, humans satisfy their needs for food, shelter, and safety largely through the use of culture.  Cultural adaptation has advanages of speed flexibility but disadvantages of misinformation and maladaptive practices
Term
Are there any culturs that are static and unchanging?
Definition
Cultures are constantly changing.  There have been no "Stone Age people" since the Stone Age.  Cultural change often occurs as part of the domination of one culture by another.
Term
Define innovation and diffusion and describe their importance to culture.
Definition
An innovation is a new variation on an existing cultural pattern.  Diffustion is the spread of elements from one culture to another.  Both are present in all cultures. However, both depend on cultural context.  New cultural traits, and the use and meaning of symbols and objects may change as they move among cultures.
Term
Do anthropologists agree of the definition and meaning of culture?
Definition
Anthropologists argue frquently over the proper definition of culture and the right ways to study and understand it.
Term
Communication
Definition
The act of transmitting information
Term
Call system
Definition
The form of communication among nonhuman primates composed of a limited number of sounds that are tied to specific stimuli in the environment
Term
Conventionality
Definition
The notion that, in human language, words are only arbitrarily or conventionally conncected to the things for which they stand
Term
Productivity
Definition
The ability of humans to combind words and sounds into new meaningful utterances
Term
Displacement
Definition
The capacity of all human languages to describe things not happening in the present.
Term
Speech community
Definition
A group of people who share a set of norms and rules for the use of language
Term
Universal grammar
Definition
A basic set of principles, conditions, and rules that underlie all languages
Term
Descriptive of structural linguistics
Definition
The study and analysis of the structure and content of particular languages
Term
Phonology
Definition
The sound system of a language
Term
Morphology
Definition
A system for creating words from sounds
Term
Syntax
Definition
The part of grammar that has to do with the arrangement of words to form phrases and sentences
Term
Semantics
Definition
The subsystem of a language that relates words to meaning
Term
Phone
Definition
A sound made by humans and used in any language
Term
International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA)
Definition
A system of writing designed to represent all the sounds used in the different languages of the world
Term
Phoneme
Definition
The smalles significant unit in a language.  A phonemic system is the sound system of a language
Term
Standard Spoken American English (SSAE)
Definition
The form of English spoked by most of the American middle class
Term
Allophones
Definition
Two or more different phones that can be used to make the same phoneme in a specific language
Term
Morpheme
Definition
The smalles unit of language that has a meaning
Term
Bound morpheme
Definition
A unit of measuring that must be associated with another
Term
Free morpheme
Definition
A unit of measuring that may stand alone as a word
Term
Word
Definition
The smallest part of a sentence that can be said alone and still retain its meaning
Term
Lexicon
Definition
The total stock of words in a language
Term
Are some forms of speech better than other forms?
Definition
Stratified societies often have many different forms of language.  When this is the case, some forms are often considered to be correct and others improper or interior.  Although society may stigmatize some forms of speech, there is no scientific sense in which one grammatical patter or accent is better or worse than another
Term
Define and describe ebonics or African American Vernacular English (AAVE)
Definition
Ebonics is the speech pattern common to rural and urban working class African American communities.  Historically, highly stigmatized, Ebonics uses grammatical rules that are different but no less logical that SSAE.
Term
What is the Sapir-Whorf hypothesis?
Definition
The notion that grammar and vocabulary influence perception of the environment, and therefore speakers of different languages perceive their worlds in different ways.  Although some evidence supports the Sapir-Whorf hypothesis, most linguists argue that similarities among languages far out-weigh their differences and athat language does not have a systematic effect on thought or perception
Term
What forms of nonverbal communication are used in human societies?
Definition
Humans everywhere communicate nonverbally as well as verbally.  In ever society, people use gestures, facial expressions, posture, and time to communicate with one another.  However, the meaning of a gesture or expression may vary greatly from culture to culture
Term
Describe 2 key ways in which language changes
Definition
Both the sound and vocabulary of languages change over time.  For example, many sounds of medieval English do not exist in current English.  new words enter vocabulary through innovation as well as contact between cultures.
Term
Was there ever a single human language?
Definition
Linguists have developed techniques to trace the histories of languages and relationships among them.  However, these techniques cannot determine if there ever was a single human language.  The development of language involved genetic changes and these are likely to happen in a single small group.  Hence, there probably was a sinle original language
Term
Are we moving toward a world with onle a single language?
Definition
Linguistic diversity has decreased dramitically, and many languages have illions of speakers and are unlikely to dissapear.  As langauges expand to include more speakers, the diversity within them may increase.  People who speak the same language may not understand one another
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