This site is 100% ad supported. Please add an exception to adblock for this site.

anthro final

Terms

undefined, object
copy deck
Characteristics of Intensive Agriculural Economies (5)
use of plow, irrigation systems, filling of swamp land or building of earth piles, heavy investment in agricultural labor and infastructure, settlement in sedentary communities
Results of the use of integrated techniques of production (7)
Agricultural surplus, child labor and larger familiers, skyrocketing population and need for new territory, individual ownership of land, need for the redistribution of agricultural surpluses, concentration of land in the hands of a few, apperance of full time specialists
Characteristics of industrial agriculture (8)
increased use of complex technologies for food production, replacement of human labor with machine labor, increased use of fossil fuels, increased influence of state agencies in farmwork, economic competition, specialization of crop production, overproduction, partnership between farmers and corporations
Kula Exchange
Ceremonial trade of valued objects practiced by people in the Trobriand Islands
souleva
red-shell necklaces, traveled in a clockwise directions in Kula trade
nwali
white shelled armbands. traveled in a counter-clockwise direction in the Kula trade
Branislaw Malinowski
studied the Kula trade and said in created ceromonial ties among trading partners
Annette Weiner
Studied Kula trade and recognized \"kitomus\" or royal shells of armbands and necklaces which were more like money
Potlach
example of chiefdom redistribution found amoung the native americans of the northwest coast. Studied by franz boas and ruth benedict. In a potlach, cheifs gave away large quantites of goods and resources in a highly wasteful manner. the more gifts that were given away or destroyed by a chief, the higher he status became. was primarly a measure of residtribution
Kinship
patterned social relationships or ties. based on consanguinity (blood), affinity (marriage), and other arbitrary criteria
prinsiple of consanguinity
examines the kin ties of an individual or group of people from the point of view of the sharing of blood or sexual intercorse such as husband and wife
descent patterns (4)
unilineal, double or bilineal, ambilineal or cognative, and parallel kinship
unilineal descent
traces kin relations or ties strictly from the mother\'s side of father\'s side but not both
double descent
traces kin ties through both the father\'s line and mother\'s line
Ambilineal descent
traces his or her descent from either that matrilineal kin group or patrilineal kin group
parallel kinship descent
males trace kin ties from male ancestors and females trace kine ties from female ancestors
lineage
a unilineal, corporate descent kinship system whose member trace their decent from a known common ancestor, or demonstrate genealogical linkages to a common known ancestor
kinship relationships (7)
lineages, clans (kindren, totemin or corporate), Phratry Kinship, moiety kinship, fictive or non-descent groups, joking relationship kinship groups, avoidance relationship
Clans, kindred, totemic, or corporate decent groups
a unilineal descent group whose members trace their descent from a common ancestor whose name is not known, or the links to whom are not specified. are much mose loosely structures than lineage
Phratry kinship group
a conglomeration of clans whose members feel that they are closely related
Moiety Kinship groups
a composite of 2 unilineal descent groups whose members live side by side, reciprocally helping one another
fictive or non-descent groups
recognizes the arbitrary assignment of members into a kinship group, and which does not respect consanguinity and affinity in the assignment of member to kinship structures. example: groups with adoptive individuals, age group members, church group members
Joking relationship kinship group
groups with a joking relationship between sets of relatives. joking in the form of flirtation, sexual innuendoes and explicit sexual remarks
avoidance relationship kinship groups
groups practice relationships of avoidance or respect. for example: son-in-law avoids mother-in-law
neolocal residence
residence pattern in which a newly marries couple choose their own dwelling which may of may not be near either set of parents
patrilocal or virilocal residence
residence pattern in which a woman goes to live with her husband\'s family after marriage
Matrilocal, or Uxorilocal residence
residence pattern in which a man lives with his wife\'s family after marriage.
Avunculocal residence
married couples live with or near the husband\'s mother\'s brother.
bilocal residence
residence pattern in which a married couple live amoung the family members of the husband sometimes and also live amoung the family members if the wife for someome time.
Ambilocal residence
a post-marital residence pattern in which the married couple has a choice of living with or nea either set of parents
cuolocal residence
residence pattern in which the husband and wife live with their respective kin and apart from one another.
hawaiian kinship module
all females of one generation are called the same term and all males of the same generation are called the same term. so all females is a childs generation are called sister. all brother\'s in a father\'s generation are called father
Eskime or Inuit kinship module
simular to our own naming systerm. separate terms from mother, father, sister, brother. the siblings of one;s parents are distinguished by gender and given the same name, regardless of whether they are related through one\'s mother or one\'s father
Iroquois kinship module
parallel cousins always have differnt terms than those of cross cousins
Omaha kinship module
same term is used for father, father\'s borther and mother and mother\'s sisters and mother\'s brother\'s daughter. has a cross generational lumping in favor of female relatives
crow kinship typology
the same term is used for mother and mother\'s sister. the same term is used for father and father\'s brother and father\'s sister\'s sons. has a cross=generational lumping in favor of male relatives.
sudanese kinship module
different descriptive terms are used for each relative in the kinship universe. no lumping of individuals. uses a different term for each individual or relative.
Incest Taboo
a rule prohibiting marital and sexual relations between people of certain relations of from certain social groups. Universally prohibits mating between those in the nuclear family
criteria for choosing marital partners (5)
romantic ability, moral rectitude, class or social status, fertility and economic independence
individual criteria for choosing marital partners
similarity of spouse to the most signifigant person, proximity or accessibility, inaccessibility of spouse to the seeker\'s residence, congruence in physical or behavioral characteristics, and lack of conguence in physical and behavioral characteristics
types of marriage (13)
monogamous, polygamous, polygyny, sororal polygyny, polyandry, fraternal polyandry, levirate, sororate, marriage by inheritance, same sex marriage, ghost marriage, simpua marriage, forced marriage or marriage by capture,
monogamous marriage
marital pattern in which one individual gets married to one spouse at a time in his or her life
polygamous marriage
a marital pattern in which one individual get married to more than one spouse at a given time in his or her life
polygyny
polugamous marriage in which one man get married to more that one wife
sororal polygyny
an arrangement permitting one man to get married to several sisters
polyandry
marital relationship in which one woman gets married to a group of males
fraternal polyandry
marital pattern in which one woman gets married to a group of brothers
levirate marriage
marital pattern in which a widow is expected ti get married to her husband\'s brother
sororate marriage
marital pattern in which a widower is expected to get married to one of his deceased wife\'s sisters
marriage by inheritance
marital pattern in chich the successor of an individual (typically the eldest son) takes over his wife or wives
same sex marriage
marital pattern in which an individual get married to another individual of his or her own sex
ghost marriage
marriages in which an individual gets married to the shost or spirit of a deceased person
simpua marriage
marital pattern in which a young girl is adopted and raised by the family members of her future husband
forced marriage or marriage by capture
a marriage in which one individual is forced to get married to another individual
bride service
work done by the husband for the wife\'s family in a specific perios of time
bride wealth
cash or goods given by the droom\'s kin to the bride\'s kin
dowry
the presentation of goods made by the bride\'s family members to the bride and bridegroom
female exchange
custom whereby a sister of the female relative of the groom is exchanged for the bride
indirect dowry
payment provided by the brides family members to the bride. but the payment originated from the groom\'s family members
patrilocal
a woman goes to live with her husband\'s family
matrilocal
husband lives with his wife\'s family
avunculocal
married coupld lives with the husband\'s mother\'s brother
duolocal
husband and wife live with their respective families, apart from one another
divorce
many traditional societies make efforts to reduce or prevent divorce by: involving many family members in the marital process and dividing the bride wealth to the bride\'s family member but enforcing the rule that to divorce a bridegroom must get back the bride wealth he paid for the bride
suttee
the practice of wife strangling among indians. the wife strangles herself after her husband\'s death
loloku
wife strangling among the figians
inheritance patterns (3)
primogeniture, ultimo geniture, and individual\'s will
primogeniture
arrangement which permits the oldest child of a deceased males individual to inherit the most of all of his property including his wives.
Ultimo geniture
arrangement which permits the youngest child of a deceased male to inherit most or all of his property.
Individuals will
property distribution is predetermined by the individual in a will written before death
gender
gender is differnt from sex becuase it is culturally constructed
georgia
sexual relations between adult homosexuals was a crime punishable by imprisonment until 2003
Vermont
first state to legally recognize a civil union between homosexuals so long as they do not call it a marriage
new hampshire
first state to install a gay priest as a bishop of the anglican church
canada
in 2003 the supreme court made an official decision to allow homosexual marriages
massachusetts
first state in the US to legalize same sex marriages
Hijras
indian third sex
two-spirits
among native americans a person who is biologically male or female but assume social and economic roles other than the roles usually associated with their sex
how native americans became two-spirits
personal incliination, parental selection or spiritual calling
economic duties of two spirits
female two spirits were hunter, trappers and warriors. male two spirits were farmers and domestice servants. compared with other members of their society, they were unusually prosperous. they were also know for cleansing the sick, keeping secrets, naming new born children and dancing during offical ceremonies
scienceism
uses scientific method in investigate social and natural phenomena, uses deductive method, uses ethnographic research, uses inductive method, uses cross-cultural perspective, employs the emic and atic perspective
ethnographic
participant research, fieldwork
emic
insider approach
etic
outsider approach
physical anthropology sub-fields (5)
descriptive morphology (measuring bones), paleontology or paleoanthropology (fossils), human variations (physiological differences), orimatology (primates), ethology (primates in natural setting)
classifications of culture
material, explicit, overt, non-normative, or non-cognitive and non-material, implicit, covert, cogvitive, or normative culture
material, explicit, overt, non-normative, or non-cognative culture
the physical products of human society
non-material, implicit, covert, cognative, or normative culture
the intangible products of human society such as values beliefs, worldwievs, ideologies, norms, folkways, and mores
Edward Tylor
\"father of anthropology\" \"culture is that complex whole wich includes knowledge, belief, arts, morals, law, custom, and any other capabilities and habits acqired by man, as a member of society\" culture ihas holism and includes everything. culture must be larned and shared. tylor believed that different societies have culture is different degrees.
Bowwow theory
language started when humans started mimicking the sounds of nature
ding dong theory
language started when people started making sounds that were related to the ideas or behavior they represented
Call Systems theory
Charles F. Hockette, most widely accepted, evolved in 3 stages (single vocalization, blending and duality of pattern phase)
Apollonian personality
pueblo indians, rarely induldent in violence, drugs, alcohol to transcend their senses
Dionysian personality
plain indians, involved in warfare and violence and ritual behavior included the use of drug, alcohol, fasting and bodily self-torture to induce religious ecstasy.
megalomaniac personality
Kwakiutl indians, characterized by childish feelings of omnipotence
Paranoid personality
Dobuan indians, characterized by fear and hatred for one another.
Balanced Reciprocity
more direct form of reciprocal exchange that has an explicit expectation of immediate return. ex. paying correct value for goods and services.
Generalized reciprocity
a pattern of exchange in which an immediate return is not expected. ex. american parents paying for food, clothing and shelter.
negative reciprocity
the attempt to get something for nothing. ex. bargaining, haggling, gambling, cheating, theft, or the outright seizure of goods.

Deck Info

99

mariammorris

permalink