Created by Jorden Booth2181
over 9 years ago
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Question | Answer |
AAVE (African American Vernacular English) | A form of English spoken by many African Americans, particularly among those of rural or urban- class backgrounds. |
Achieved/ Ascribed status | A social position that is substantially based on life experiences. / A social position based entirely on birth (kings, queens, princes, duchesses) |
Animism | The notion that all objects, living and nonliving, are imbued with spirits. |
Applied Anthropology | The application of anthropology to the solution of human problems. |
Anthropology | The comparative studies of of human societies and cultures. |
Assimulation | A process through which immigrants were expected to abandon their distinctive cultures in favor of an American identity. |
Basic Human Needs Approach | Projects aimed at providing access to clean water, education, and health care for the poorest of the worlds people. |
Balanced Reciprocity | The giving and receiving of goods of a nearly equal value with a clear obligation of a return gift within a specified time limit. |
Bilateral Descent | System of descent under which individuals are equally affiliated with their mother's side and their father's side. |
Caste | An endogamous, ranked, and permanent group based on ascribed status. (See "ascribed") |
Caste System | Social stratification based on birth or ascribed status in which social mobility between castes is not possible. |
Clan | An unilineal kinship group whose members believe themselves to be descended from a common ancestor but who cannot trace this link through known representatives. |
Class | A category of people who all have about the same opportunity to obtain economic resources, power, and prestige and who are ranked relative to other categories. |
Class System | A form of social stratification in which the different strata form a continuum and social mobility is possible. |
Cognitive Anthropology | A theoretical approach that defines culture in terms of the rules and meaning underlying human behavior, rather than behavior itself. |
Collaborative Anthropology | Ethnography that gives priority to informants on the topic, methodology, and written results of research. |
Collateral Kin | Kin descended from a common ancestor but not in a direct ascendent or descendent line, such as siblings and cousins. |
Comparitive Linguistics | The science of documenting the relationships between languages and grouping them into language families. |
Composite (compound) Family | An aggregate of nuclear families linked by a common spouse. |
Consanguineal Kin | Relationship by blood. |
Conflict Theory | A perspective on social stratification that focuses on economic inequality as a source of conflict change. |
Cultural Anthropology | The comparative study of human societies and cultures. Cultural anthropologists examine thought, meaning, and behavior that is learned rather than genetically transmitted, and that is typical of groups of people. |
Cultural Relativisim | 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 one another. |
Cultural Resource Management (CRM) | The protection and management of archaeological, archival, and architectural resources. |
Culture Shock | Feelings of alienation and helplessness that result from rapid immersion in a new and different culture. |
Descent | The culturally established affiliation between parent and child. |
Dialect | The grammatical constructions that deviate from those used b the socially dominant group in a society. |
Ebonics | a form of English spoken by many African Americans, particularly those among rural or urban - working class backgrounds. |
Emic | a study that attempts to capture what ideas and practices mean to members of culture. |
Enculturation | The process of learning to be a member of a particular cultural group. |
Enthocentrism | Judging other cultures from the perspective of one's own culture; the notion that ones own culture is more beautiful, rational, and nearer to perfection than others. |
Ethnography | The description of a society or culture. Ethnography refers to both the process of qualitative, fieldwork based research and the written results of that research. |
Etic | a study that describes and analyzes culture according to principles and theories drawn from the Western specific traditions. |
Hegemony | The dominance of a political elite based on a close identification of their own goals and those of the larger society. |
Holistic / Holism | In anthropology, an approach that considers culture, history, language, and biology essential to complete understanding of human society. |
Horticulture | Production of plants using simple, non mechanized technology; fields are not used continuously. |
Human Variation | The mapping and explaining of physical differences among modern human groups. |
Kindred | A unique kin network made up of all the people related to a specific individuals a bilateral kinship system. |
Kinship | a culturally defined relationship established on the basis of blood ties or through marriage. |
Lexicon | The total stock of words in a language. |
Lineage | A group of kin whose members trace descent from a known common ancestor. |
Modernization Theory | a model of development that predicts that nonindustrial societies will move in the social and technological direction of industrialized nations. |
Patrilinealage | a lineage formed by descent of the male line. |
Semiotics | The study of the role of signs and symbols in communication and meaning. |
Sororate | The custom in which when a males wife dies, her sister is given to him as a wife. |
Stratified Society | A society characterized by formal, permanent social and economic inequality. |
Transculturation | The transformation of adopted cultural traits, resulting in new cultural forms. |
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