Culture
Ethnocentrism
Ethnocentric Fallacy
the belief that one’s own ethnic group is innately superior to others and that all other groups should therefore be judged by one’s own local standards
Cultural Relativism
The attempt to understand the beliefs and behaviours of other cultures in terms of the culture in which they are found
Relativistic Fallacy
problems with ethnocentrism and cultural relativism
Armchair Fallacy
refers to an approach to the study of various societies that dominated anthropology in the late 1800s
-collection, study and analysis of the writings of missionaries, explorers, and colonists who has sustained contact with non-western peoples
Participant Observation
an element of fieldwork that can involve participating in daily tasks, and observing daily interactions among a particular group
Ethnographic Fieldwork
Ethnography
a written description and analysis of a particular group of people, usually based upon anthropological fieldwork
Socio-Cultural Anthropology
Applied Anthropology
-putting knowledge into practice
critics:
-you are being hired by a group of people/ company/ organizations to do the work for them, how can you guarantee your work is going to be important?
Social Identity
the view people have of their own and others positions in society. Social identities are earned personal and social affiliations including gender, sexuality, race class, national identity, etc.
Enculturation
the process through which individuals learn identity. It can encompass parental socialization, the influence of peers, the mass media, government, and other forces
Egocentric Society
- a person’s identity is independent of the group.
Sociocentric Society
- a person gets their identity from the group
Gender
culturally constructed ideals of behaviour, dress, occupations, roles and comportment for particular sexes
Third Gender
A gender role given to someone who does not fit within strictly masculine or feminine gender roles in a society that recognizes the possibility of at least three genders
Gender Stratification
hegemonic masculinity
Rites of Passage
Worldview
Symbolic Actions
-we can think of metaphors, rituals, stories, music and myths as symbolic actions, activities that dramatically depict the worldview shared by a specific group of people
Metaphor
Ritual
a dramatic rendering or social portrayal of meanings shared by a specific body of people in a way that makes them seem correct and proper
Myth
a story or narrative that portrays the meanings people give to their experience