Culture
50 questions available
Questions
According to the definition provided, what constitutes culture for anthropologists?
View answer and explanationWhat is the term anthropologists use for the process of learning culture?
View answer and explanationWhich of the following are the four key elements an anthropologist may consider when trying to understand the complex workings of a culture, as described in the section 'Culture Is Symbolic and Material'?
View answer and explanationWhat is the anthropological concept of ethnocentrism?
View answer and explanationWhat was the core concept of the 'unilineal cultural evolution' theory proposed by early anthropologists like Edward Burnett Tylor and Lewis Henry Morgan?
View answer and explanationWho was the key figure in American anthropology who rejected unilineal cultural evolution and advocated for an approach called 'historical particularism'?
View answer and explanationWhat is Clifford Geertz's 'interpretivist approach' primarily concerned with?
View answer and explanationIn the context of power dynamics within a culture, what does the term 'stratification' refer to?
View answer and explanationWhat concept did Italian political philosopher Antonio Gramsci develop to describe the ability of a dominant group to create consent and agreement within a population without the use of force?
View answer and explanationAccording to the U.S. Census Bureau data from 2010 cited in the chapter, what percentage of all marriages in the U.S. were interracial?
View answer and explanationJames Scott's book 'Weapons of the Weak' describes what form of resistance used by Malaysian peasants?
View answer and explanationWhat is the emerging field of epigenetics, as discussed in the chapter, primarily concerned with?
View answer and explanationThe chapter states that the human body contains approximately 100 trillion cells. What percentage of these cells are independent microorganisms that form the human microbiome?
View answer and explanationAccording to Max Weber's 'The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism', what cultural values were central to the 'Protestant ethic' that enabled early capitalism to flourish?
View answer and explanationWhat is the term for the mixing of cultural influences into a community's beliefs and practices, often seen as a result of globalization instead of simple homogenization?
View answer and explanationThe chapter discusses how McDonald's adapts its menu in different countries. In which country does McDonald's serve McSpaghetti?
View answer and explanationWhat does anthropologist Lila Abu-Lughod's study of television dramas in Egypt explore?
View answer and explanationWhat are 'mental maps of reality' as defined in the chapter?
View answer and explanationThe Supreme Court case 'Loving v. Virginia' in 1967 was a landmark decision that addressed which cultural norm?
View answer and explanationAccording to the chapter's discussion of consumer culture, approximately how many television commercials do children in the United States watch per year?
View answer and explanationWhat is the primary argument of Margaret Mead's book 'Coming of Age in Samoa' as described in the chapter?
View answer and explanationThe research strategy of 'thick description,' advocated by Clifford Geertz, involves what?
View answer and explanationWhat is the concept of 'agency' in an anthropological context?
View answer and explanationIn 2017, how many gun-related deaths were reported by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control, according to the chapter's opening section?
View answer and explanationWhat does the concept of 'cultural relativism' require an anthropologist to do?
View answer and explanationWhich theoretical framework, developed by British social anthropologists between the 1920s and 1960s, viewed human societies as living organisms and analyzed them at a fixed point in time?
View answer and explanationWhat is a primary function of 'mental maps of reality'?
View answer and explanationThe French law passed in 2004 banning clothing that indicates particular religious beliefs in public schools was widely understood to be targeting what?
View answer and explanationWhat percentage of human genetic codes are identical among all people, according to the chapter?
View answer and explanationIn the discussion of consumer culture, what does the chapter identify as the 'mythical mediator of gift exchange and the symbol of Christmas consumer marketing'?
View answer and explanationWhat is the primary characteristic that differentiates 'values' from 'norms' in the anthropological framework presented in the chapter?
View answer and explanationHow did early British social anthropologists, practicing structural functionalism, approach their fieldwork?
View answer and explanationAccording to the chapter, what is the concept of a 'symbol'?
View answer and explanationWhat was the total U.S. credit card debt in 2018, as cited in the section on Financial Services and Credit Cards?
View answer and explanationIn the analysis of the Balinese cockfight, what did Clifford Geertz argue the event symbolized?
View answer and explanationWhat is the primary argument of the 'Your Turn: Fieldwork' exercise on College Students and Consumer Culture?
View answer and explanationHow much of the world's money exists in tangible, physical form, according to the chapter's discussion of symbols?
View answer and explanationThe American Anthropological Association's Declaration on Anthropology and Human Rights draws heavily on principles articulated in documents from which organization?
View answer and explanationWhat does the 'Your Turn: Fieldwork' exercise on Blue Jeans ask students to consider about the clothing in their closet?
View answer and explanationWho did Eric Wolf urge anthropologists to see power as an aspect of?
View answer and explanationIn Robert Smith's book 'Mexican New York', what is a key way that immigrants maintain connections to their hometowns in Mexico?
View answer and explanationWhat is the estimated number of firearms owned by Americans for a population of 320 million people, as stated in the chapter?
View answer and explanationThe Gregorian calendar, used in much of the world today, was introduced in 1582 by which institution?
View answer and explanationIn the context of the historical development of anthropology, who were considered 'armchair anthropologists'?
View answer and explanationWhich of the following is an example of a 'norm'?
View answer and explanationWhat is Franz Boas's concept of 'diffusion'?
View answer and explanationThe chapter discusses how humans are not just 'human beings' but 'human becomings.' What evidence supports this idea?
View answer and explanationIn the 'Social Life of Things' feature on blue jeans, where are the jeans described as being sewn and then dyed/distressed?
View answer and explanationWhat is the primary critique of Clifford Geertz's culture concept, as mentioned at the end of the section 'Culture and Meaning'?
View answer and explanationAccording to the chapter, which two elements of culture powerfully frame what its participants say, do, and think?
View answer and explanation