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Perspectives: An Open Introduction to Cultural Anthropology Practice Questions and Answers (100% Pass)

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Perspectives: An Open Introduction to Cultural Anthropology Practice Questions and Answers (100% Pass)

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  • 11 août 2024
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  • 2024/2025
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  • Cultural Anthropology
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©PREP4EXAMS@2024 [REAL EXAM DUMPS] Monday, July 22, 2024 1:06 PM



Perspectives: An Open Introduction to Cultural Anthropology
Practice Questions and Answers (100% Pass)

Anthropology - ✔️✔️the study of humanity, including its prehistoric origins and contemporary
human diversity
Culture - ✔️✔️a set of beliefs, practices, and symbols that are learned and shared. Together, they
form an all-encompassing, integrated whole that binds people together and shapes their
worldview and lifeways.
Cultural determinism - ✔️✔️the idea that behavioral differences are a result of cultural, not racial
or genetic causes.
Cultural evolutionism - ✔️✔️a discredited theory popular in nineteenth century anthropology
suggesting that societies evolved through stages from simple to advanced.
Cultural relativism - ✔️✔️the idea that we should seek to understand another person's beliefs and
behaviors from the perspective of their own culture and not our own.
Enculturation - ✔️✔️the process of learning the characteristics and expectations of a culture or
group.
Ethnocentrism - ✔️✔️the tendency to view one's own culture as most important and correct and as
the stick by which to measure all other cultures.
Ethnography - ✔️✔️the in-depth study of the everyday practices and lives of a people.

Going native - ✔️✔️becoming fully integrated into a cultural group through acts such as taking a
leadership position, assuming key roles in society, entering into marriage, or other behaviors that
incorporate an anthropologist into the society he or she is studying.
Hominin - ✔️✔️Humans (Homo sapiens) and their close relatives and immediate ancestors.

Deductive - ✔️✔️reasoning from the general to the specific; the inverse of inductive reasoning.
Deductive research is more common in the natural sciences than in anthropology. In a deductive
approach, the researcher creates a hypothesis and then designs a study to prove or disprove the
hypothesis. The results of deductive research can be generalizable to other settings.



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Inductive - ✔️✔️a type of reasoning that uses specific information to draw general conclusions. In
an inductive approach, the researcher seeks to collect evidence without trying to definitively
prove or disprove a hypothesis. The researcher usually first spends time in the field to become
familiar with the people before identifying a hypothesis or research question. Inductive research
usually is not generalizable to other settings.
Paleoanthropologist - ✔️✔️biological anthropologists who study ancient human relatives.

Participant-observation - ✔️✔️a type of observation in which the anthropologist observes while
participating in the same activities in which her informants are engaged.
Armchair anthropology - ✔️✔️an early and discredited method of anthropological research that
did not involve direct contact with the people studied.
Functionalism - ✔️✔️an approach to anthropology developed in British anthropology that
emphasized the way that parts of a society work together to support the functioning of the whole.
Structural-Functionalism - ✔️✔️an approach to anthropology that focuses on the ways in which
the customs or social institutions in a culture contribute to the organization of society and the
maintenance of social order.
Holism - ✔️✔️taking a broad view of the historical, environmental, and cultural foundations of
behavior.
Kinship - ✔️✔️blood ties, common ancestry, and social relationships that form families within
human groups.
Participant observation - ✔️✔️a type of observation in which the anthropologist observes while
participating in the same activities in which her informants are engaged.
The Other - ✔️✔️a term used to describe people whose customs, beliefs, or behaviors are
"different" from one's own
Contested identity - ✔️✔️a dispute within a group about the collective identity or identities of the
group.
Diaspora - ✔️✔️the scattering of a group of people who have left their original homeland and now
live in various locations. Examples of people living in the diaspora are Salvadorian immigrants
in the United States and Europe, Somalian refugees in various countries, and Jewish people
living around the world.


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Emic - ✔️✔️a description of the studied culture from the perspective of a member of the culture or
insider.
Etic - ✔️✔️a description of the studied culture from the perspective of an observer or outsider.

Indigenous - ✔️✔️people who have continually lived in a particular location for a long period of
time (prior to the arrival of others) or who have historical ties to a location and who are culturally
distinct from the dominant population surrounding them. Other terms used to refer to indigenous
people are aboriginal, native, original, first nation, and first people. Some examples of
indigenous people are Native Americans of North America, Australian Aborigines, and the
Berber (or Amazigh) of North Africa.
Key Informants - ✔️✔️individuals who are more knowledgeable about their culture than others
and who are particularly helpful to the anthropologist.
Land tenure - ✔️✔️how property rights to land are allocated within societies, including how
permissions are granted to access, use, control, and transfer land.
Noble savage - ✔️✔️an inaccurate way of portraying indigenous groups or minority cultures as
innocent, childlike, or uncorrupted by the negative characteristics of "civilization."
Qualitative - ✔️✔️anthropological research designed to gain an in-depth, contextualized
understanding of human behavior.
Quantitative - ✔️✔️anthropological research that uses statistical, mathematical, and/or numerical
data to study human behavior.
Remittances - ✔️✔️money that migrants laboring outside of the region or country send back to
their hometowns and families. In Mexico, remittances make up a substantial share of the total
income of some towns' populations.
Thick description - ✔️✔️a term coined by anthropologist Clifford Geertz in his 1973 book The
Interpretation of Cultures to describe a detailed description of the studied group that not only
explains the behavior or cultural event in question but also the context in which it occurs and
anthropological interpretations of it.
Undocumented - ✔️✔️the preferred term for immigrants who live in a country without formal
authorization from the state. Undocumented refers to the fact that these people lack the official
documents that would legally permit them to reside in the country. Other terms such as illegal



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