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anthrocult

Terms

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Aspects of Culture
LEARNED (both consciously & unconsciously), SHARED (among members of a group), SYMBOLIC (eg language), INTEGRATED (not a haphazard assortment), CHANGING (adaptive, malleable)
Cultural Relativism
The position that the customs and values should not be judged by standards of another culture
Ethnocentrism
The opinion that one's own way of life is best, natural, or correct, and the tendency to judge others culture against your own
Culture Shock
Experiencing the vast differences among culture, comparing a cultures differences to one's own
Creationism
Belief in Biblical creation as the source of biological diversity
Independent invention
Development of the same culture trait or pattern in separate cultures as a result of comparable needs and circumstances.
Diffusion
Cultural borrowing that can occur without first hand contact.
Indigenization
When something form the outside is modified to fit the local culture
Imperialism
A policy of extending the rule of a nation or empire over foreign nations and of taking and holding foreign colonies
Colonialism
The political, social, economic, and cultural domination of a territory and its people by a foreign power for an extended time
Hegemony
When subordinates internalize and accept the naturalness of their own domination in a stratified social order (One way to curb resistance)
Cultural Imperialism
The spread or advance of one culture at the expense of others, or its imposition on other societies, which it modifies, replaces, or destroys- usually because of differential economic or political influence
Uniformitarianism
Belief that explanations for past events should be sought in ordinary forces that continue to work today
Acculturation
Changes that result when groups come into continuous first contact (may be forced or voluntary)
Enculturation
The social process by which culture is learned and transmitted across the generations
Westernization
The acculturative influence of Western expansion on other cultures
Ndebele People
African tribe, women spend whole lives painting houses distinctively and elaborately
Natural Selection
The process by which nature selects the forms most fit to survive and reproduce in a given environment do so in greater numbers than others in the same population
Adaptive/Maladaptive Trait
Adaptive- favored by natural selection in a particular environment, continues on...
Mendelian Genetics
Studies ways in which chromosomes transmit genes across the generations
Population Genetics
Field that studies causes of genetic variation, maintenance, and change in breeding populations
Recessive/Dominant Genes
Genetic trait that is masked by a dominant trait/Allele that masks another allele in a heterozygote
Gene flow
Exchange of genetic material between populations of the same species through direct or indirect interbreeding
Genetic Drift
Change in gene frequency that results not from natural selection but from chance; most common in small populations
Meiosis
Special process by which sex cells are produced; four cells are produced from one, each with half the genetic material of the original cell
Mitosis
Ordinary cell division; DNA molecules copy themselves, creating two identical cells out of one
Phenotype
An organism's evident traits; its "manifest biology"- anatomy and physiology
Genotype
An organism's hereditary makeup
Phenotypical adaptation
Adaptive biological changes that occur during the individual's lifetime, made possible by biological plasticity
Polymorphism (Balanced)
Two or more forms, such as alleles of the same gene, that maintain a constant frequency in a population from generation to generation
Law of independent assortment
MENDEL; Genes are inherited independently from each other (short plant & long plant)
Homologies
Traits that organisms have jointly inherited from their common ancestor
Analogies
Similarities arising as a result of similar selective forces; traits produced by convergent evolution
Convergent evolution
Independent operation of similar selective forces; process by which analogies are produced
Punctuated equilibrium
Model of evolution; long periods of equilibrium, during which species change little, are interrupted by sudden changes- evolutionary jumps
Bipedalism
Upright two legged locomotion, the key feature differentiating early hominins from the apes
Foramen magnum
Where spinal cord exits head, centered underneath skull indicates bipedalism, further back is all fours
"Out of Africa" hypothesis
Hom erectus; replacement model where Homo moved out of Africa and replaced colonies other places
Multi-regional hypothesis
Regional populations connected by recurrent gene flow (Importance of Africa in Mitochrondrial Analysis)
Participant Observation
Taking part in the events one is observing, describing, and analyzing
Anthropological Methods
Ethnography, Longitudinal research (ability to really witness change over time), Survey research (Sampling, impersonal data collection)
Ethnography
The 1st hand study of a local setting; research process in which the anthropologist closely observes, records, and engages in the daily life of another culture and then writes accounts of the field study
Fieldwork
Going to the field and observing, recording, engaging in daily life of another culture
Holism
An approach that studies the whole of the human condition: past, present, and future; biology, society, language, and culture
Comparative Approach
Anthropology examines all societies, ancient and modern, small and large
Key Cultural Consultants
An expert on a particular aspect of local life who helps the ethnographer understand that aspect. Also called key informant.
Potassium-Argon
Dating of only inorganic material, volcanic rock. The older the specimen, the more reliable the dating.
Globalization
The accelerating interdependence of nations in a world system linked economically and through mass media and modern transportation systems
Ethnology
The theoretical, comparative study of society and culture; compares cultures in time and space
Bioculturalism
Referring to the inclusion and combination (to solve a problem) of both biological and cultural approaches- one of anthro's hallmarks
Stratigraphy
Science that examines the ways in which earth sediments are deposited in demarcated layers known as strata
Genealogy
A line of descent traced continuously from one ancestor
Paleoanthropology
The study of human life and immediate ancestors through the fossil record
Carbon-14
Absolute dating of only organic substances through measure of radioactive decay
Thermoluminescence
Absolute dating technique for rocks and minerals, especially fossils that measure the electrons that are constantly being trapped in rocks and minerals.

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