ANTH 101 Notes
ANTH 101 Notes
- Anthropology is asking questions about humans, and why those answers matter/change
things
Day 2
- nature vs nurture
- behavior can’t be explained by just biology and evolution
o how does enculturation affect this
o why is nature justified for inequality
o cultural adaptations can replace genetic adaptations
- culture influences everything, even basic needs
EMIC vs ETIC
- Emic knowledge/interpretations are existing in the culture
- Etic knowledge is generalizations about behavior made by an outsider
Day 3
Culture and globalization-
- Homogenization
o Loss of diversity?
o relocalization, production of new things
k-pop, Bollywood, spaghetti westerns
fill in later
Creating culture:
- Consumer culture
o Economics/culture dichotomy
Advertising is enculturation
Teaching us concepts of success and wanting to consume
o Max weber –“protestant work ethic” , grow out of capitalism
Religious history in us similar to free market economy
Secular work as “sacred calling” as asceticism
Led to drive for capitalism
- Rituals in the US
o Valentines day
- Global impacts of consumption?
Early ethnography- Herodotus
Early fieldworkers:
- Bronislaw Malinowski
o Stuck in trobriand islands after wwi
o Set standards- “get off the veranda”, participant observation
Get into routines of daily life
- Franz boas
o Geographer
o Holistic approach, 4 fields, salvage ethnography
o Disprove unilineal approach- replace with historical particularism, diffusion
o Cultural relativism- emic point of view
o Against racism in science
- E. e. evans-pritchard
o Fieldwork was an experiment
o Structural particularism- how does the part contribute to the whole
o Didn’t consider history/broad world
Writing ethnography
- Start with emic perspective
o Be reflexive- how you affect your data(age, gender….)
- Start writing with an etic perspective
o Wheres your ethnographic authority
- Incorporate other voices- polyvocality
Doing fieldwork
- Getting qualitative, quantitative data- scientific method for examining the social world
o Participant observation, field notes
o Interviews, surveys
o Oral histories
o Mapping physical, geographic surroundings- built, natural
o Drawing, photography
o Network, kinship analysis
- Fieldwork as an art
o Interpersonal skills
o Listening skills including for zeros
o Self-awareness
o Risk to be changed- process of mutual transformation
Day 4
Language and Culture
Language – symbolic system, organized to rules, conveys info
- How does human language differ from other animals?
o Infinite possibilities
o Control over vocal chords, tongue, lips
o Foxp2 gene
o Hyoid bone
o Art, tools
- Primate abilities
o Using ASL
o Lucy the chimp- productivity, combining words
o Displacement- past and future
o Imitative? Primates only use ASL among humans
- Not humanlike grammar
Descriptive linguistics
- Phonemes
o Smallest sound unit that makes a difference in meaning(study of = phonology)
o Can vary- 12 is smallest 120 largest
- Morphemes
o Smallest units that have meaning on their own (morphology)
Creating new words, adding meaning
o Compounding in English
- Syntax
o How morphemes combine to make phrases, sentences
o Grammar
- Kinesics
o Body movement
Proxemics
Sign language
- Paralanguage- noises, tones that accompany speech, sign
o Emojis, reaction gifs
Linguistic specialization
- Language is dynamic
- New words always being made
- Focal vocabularies: lexical richness due to particular cultural reality
o Digital communication
Computer: in Icelandic, from words for “number” and “prophetess”
Inuktitut – “something that works like a brain”
o Color term growth in English because of fashion
Varies by gender
o Kinship terms
o Pastoralist vocabularies for animals
Day 5
Sociolinguistics
- How culture/language shape each other- relations of power to age, race, class, ethnicity,
gender, sexuality
o Common approach in linguistic anthropology
- Speech community: group of people sharing norms for language use
- Difference between language/dialect
o Mutual intelligibility- language
o Dialect – non-standard variety of a language
Accent: only how you sound
o Classification not absolute
o Max weinreich – “A language is a dialect with an army and navy”
Language and state borders
- Language continuum
o Variation occurs gradually
- Historical linguistics: change over time, how languages are related through ancestor
languages
Code-switching:
- Act of switching between language variants because of cultural contexts
o If within a sentence: called code-mixing
o Not always because you forgot or don’t know a word- social meanings
Esmeralda Salas- Accents and Standard Language Ideology
Accents – who has them, and what are they
Accents refer to:
- Pitch/stress
- Specific diacritics
- Phonological and intonation features
Accent modification/reduction
- What is desired and why
- Is it about language or something more
Standard language ideology: belief there is a language variety that is superior
Ask:
- What is the desired accent
- What are the social/political/historical/economic processes that have contributed to
this
- What are consequences
Lippi-green – “When people reject an accent, they also reject the identity of the person
speaking: his or her race, ethnic heritage, national origin, regional affiliation, or economic class”
Day 6
The Race Paradox
Race has real impacts on peoples lives, but no scientific basis
- Social reality, biological fiction
Race: classifying people using physical characteristics
Racism: can be individual and institutional
Recap of race:
As anthropologists, examine how racism can be:
- Individual
- Institutional(structural) – create unequal access to power, resources…
Colorblindness:
- “not seeing color” in social/institutional sense
- May perpetuate institutional racism
- Denying wealth, property, education, health, employment
Race in the US
Racial privilege-
- “invisible package of unearned assets” – white privilege
- Those in the dominant group favored by others in the group
- Class, region, gender, sexuality all interconnected – privilege is not uniform
- Case study: regional/class discrimination in white people in rural florida
o Couldn’t get jobs
o Called “white trash”
- Still an issue of social mobility disparities- improved class status doesn’t bring a decrease
of discrimination for African-americans in the same way it does for whites
- English-only movements
- John baugh- mixed guise techniques
o Linguistic profiling
Day 7
Paths to incorporation:
- Assimilation: minorities assimilate to norms and patterns
o Melting pot: immigration into US
- Multiculturalism: ethic relations where new immigrants and children enculturate to
dominant culture, but retain ethnic culture
o Hyphenated identities
- Dr. Cadrin Gill: carib, grew up on st. Vincent, raised as English, became a doctor in LA
- Not much known about history of caribs
- Caribs resisted against French and british, but british broke the treaty and took all the
land
- Sent to balliceaux
Diaspora
- Dispersal of people across boundaries of two or more nation-states
- Real or imagined relationship with homeland
- Self-awareness of group identity that lasts multiple generations
- Diaspora caused by greater force – war, political change, need for labor/income,
industrialization
- Can involve historical/cultural trauma – “the cumulative social-cultural trauma spanning
across generations which stems from massive cataclysmic events”
Day 8
Ethnic cleansing: members of one religious/ethnic group destroying each other in a specific
area
- Yugoslavia
o Local groups that used to live peacefully were mobilized by military, politics
- Bringa – changing solidarities
o Not identifying as part of a village, but as muslims, catholics, etc
o Local croats destroyed all muslim homes
Fluidity in sex:
- Anne Fausto-sterling: male/female sex not absolute
o Intersex: combination of male-associated, female-associated primary
characteristics
o Many societies ignore this
In US – turned ambiguous genitalia “female”
Biopower – Foucault – disciplining body through control of biological sex
characteristics
Criticized, transition to patient-centered care: allowing person to choose
later in life
Gender ideologies:
- Gender stratification: unequal distribution of power, access to group’s resources,
opportunities, rights, privileges, based on ender
o Gender stereotypes
o Held in place by gender ideologies
“man the hunter”
“the sperm and egg” tale
o Martin – reproductive cells are gendered when we talk about them
Gender identities:
- Transgender: gender identity different than assigned sex
- Queer/non-binary: not conforming to gender norms
- Many other similar sex/gender systems worldwide, not same as west
- Hijra – South Asia
o 3rd gender: marginalized and revered
- Muxes – Zapotec community in Oaxaca, Mexico
o 3rd gender
- Two-spirit: pan-indigenous north American category
o 2-5 genders
o Have other specific terms
o Sacred, ceremonial
- Buginese 5-gender system: Sulawesi, Indonesia
o Men – male, masculine
o Women – female, feminine
o Calalai – female, masculine
o Calabai – male, feminine
o Bissu – all genders, intersex, religious role
Muxes film:
- Similar to transgender, but different
- 3rd gender: accepted
- Muxes: means feminine, fear
- Zapotec: no distinction between genders when talking about someone
Day 9
Constructing ties
Marriage:
- Socially recognized relationship
o Physical/emotional intimacy, rights to property/inheritance
- Creates affinal relationship (kinship through marriage/alliance, not descent)
- Arranged vs companionate marriage
o Nanda
- Romantic love: more prevalent than thought by early anthropologists
o Is it always a part of marriage? Outside of marriage does it involve sex?
Khevsur people in Georgia (country)
Arranged marriage, but could have a sts’orproba (romantic relationship)
before marriage
- Walking marriage: man walks into women’s bedroom at night – if she lets him stay he
must leave in the morning
o You can leave easily if you don’t like a marriage
- Children live with mothers
- Women can have as many relationships as they want
- Women enjoy more freedom then in most of china
- Women tell men if they like them or not
-
- Singing and dancing part of culture – now more of a tourist attraction
- Tourists mainly interested in walking marriage
o Taking advantage of the culture
- Women tourists attracted in Mosuo men too
- Rural mosuo village: seeing media, building paved roads, telephone lines
Day 10
Formalizing a marriage
- Gift exchange:
o For the couple
o Dowry – bride’s kin to groom’s kin
Family inheritance to establish new household
Compensation to groom for “taking on a wife”
Gender stratification: dowry seen as insufficient, bride face
violence/rejection
Taking advantage of dowry
o Bridewealth – groom’s kin to bride’s kin
Compensate for loss of bride, create stability
Makes bride’s family richer and more attractive
Symbolic agreement
Sometimes bride service – groom works for bride’s family
Incompatibility, infertility, infidelity – return of bridewealth
- Sister exchange
o Woman marries man, sister from his family marries the woman’s brother or
cousin
- Marriage becomes transaction: coming together of families
Kin beyond biology, marriage
- Idealized version of nuclear family in US after WWII
- Family of procreation, rather than family of orientation
- Small units, good for mobility, economic success, independence
- Not universal: just small part of middle class
Day 11
Religions, rituals:
- All religions have sacred (holy), profane (not hold) – Durkheim
o Ritual: repeated acts, embody beliefs, create continuity and belonging
- Rites of passage – ritual that enacts status change – A. Van Gennep
o Symbolic
- 3 stages of rites of passage: separation, liminality, reincorporation – V. Turner
o Communitas: sense of camaraderie, vision of what constitutes a good life,
commitment to social action
Magic
- Part of rituals: using spells, incantations, words, actions to try to get supernatural forces
to act in certain ways
o Imitative/sympathetic magic
o Contagious magic
Class
- System of power based on wealth, income, status – creates unequal distribution of
resources
o Resources tend to move up – maintain inequality
- Caste is different – no social mobility
- Stratify life changes, affect social mobility opportunities
o Intersectionality: how many factors overlap to shape life changes, patterns of
stratification – how power systems impact most marginalized people – Crenshaw
System of exchange
3 main systems
- Market exchange
o Currency
o Bartering
- Reciprocity
o Generalized(give/receive)
No calculated value, repayment not predetermined
Out of goodness
Close kin, friends
o Balanced (equal)
More distant relationships
Building relationships beyond kin
Follow norms of giving. Accepting, reciprocating
o Negative (receive/give)
Expect to receive more than you give
Strangers, enemies
- Redistribution
o Goods collected, reallocated differently
o Good flow through certain point
Potlatch ceremonies in indigenous northwest coast
o Can increase or decrease inequality
Leveling mechanisms reallocate resources to maximize common good
Taxes
Increasing inequality?
Types of economies
Economy: cultural adaption to environment that allows people to use resources to
survive/thrive
- Include ideas, activities, technologies; relations and instututions
- Production, distribution, consumption
types:
- Food foraging
o Hunting, fishing, gathering
o Mobilized
o Egalitarian
o Possible in all ecosystems
o 250,000 people worldwide, most use other systems too
- Pastoralism
o Domesticating animals
o Herding for food, labor
o Seasonal migration
o Combined with foraging, horticulture today
- Horticulture
o Non-intensive plant cultivation
o Not a lot of land or labor
o Small plots, rotation
o Slash-and-burn
o More sedentary, can be combined with other methods
- Agriculture
o Intensive, large-scale farming for food production
o Fertile crescent – tigris, quphrates, nile
o Indus valley, yellow river, Mexico, andes
o More land, more labor
Irrigation, fertilizer, draft animals, tools, machines
o Can satisfy needs, have a surplus – sedentary
o Drawbacks?
- Industrial agriculture
o Farming today
o Monocropping, pesticides, corporate ownership, extensive technology usage,
intensive genetic engineering
European expansion
- Europe wanted Chinese goods
- Chinese exports surpassed imports – needed payments of deficits in precious metals
- Started european agenda in Americas, launched colonial era
o Colonialization: the nation-state extends political, economic, military power
beyond borders for an extended period of time
Triangle trade
- Trading slaves, sugar, cotton, furs between Europe, Africa, Americas
o Big impact on economic, political, social life
o 1650-1860s, 10-15 million people enslaved
o Slave labor subsidized economic growth and development of Europe and
Americas for 350+ years
o Institutional racism, inequality still felt
Cacao – lasting impacts
How do we see lasting colonial impacts in El Cacao?
- Exploitation of resources, labor
o What positives in el cacao?
- Who has power?
o Producers vs consumers
- Direction of flow of capital
o Who profits the most?
- Direction of flow of labor
o How does this drive migration?
El Cacao movie
- Cooperative belongs to all farmers
- Inspected
- Dangerous job
- In Africa: cacao produced on large-scale farms, chemicals
- Organic farming in panama
- Few education opportunities, but value in farming and school
- Diversified crops
- Monilla disease- spoils most of the fruit
- Cacao still has to go through co-op
- Don’t get anything out of it: others get the profit, not the farmers
Flexible accumulation
- 1900s-1950s – fordist approach: social compact between labor, capital, government
o Living wage, 8 hours a day, starting to afford what you produce
o Regulations for health, safety
- 60s, 70s – flexible accumulation – bypassing of high production cost, organized labor,
environmental laws
o Offshoring, outsourcing
o Global cities
Day 13
Medical Anthropology
links between health and culture? How do understandings of health and treatments differ?
- More than juts germs, individual behavior, genes
- Health: holistic concept – physical, mental, social
- Medical migration – movement of disease, treatments, systems, people across borders
Key terms:
- Health ecology: interactions between environment and culture
- Interpretivist approach: health systems as mental maps, systems of meaning
o How do we make sense of health, illness
- Critical medical anthropology: systems of inequality, impacts on health
o Political, economic, race, class, age, gender…
o How are health systems bound up with power
Ethnomedicine
- Local systems of health, healing within cultural norms and values
o Ethnopharmacology: local use of natural substances in healing remedies,
practices
- Amchi medicine – Tibet buddhist in Ladakh, India
o Effective in minor illnesses
o Passed down through lineage
o Globalization
Increasing study of biomedical practices
Also spread of amchi medicine to other places
Biomedicine
- Applying biology and natural sciences to diagnose disease, promote healing
- Local variations but also medication, surgery, invasive treatments
- How do biomedical practices vary?
o Even western practices reflect cultural norms/values
way of thinking and knowing: epistemology
individualism, rationalism, enlightenment
Anthropology of birth
- Physiological process with many culturally-associated practices worldwide
o Variation comes from different conceptions of the body and its needs
- Different kinds of experiences in contexts
o Birth in four cultures – Floyd
Mayan, us, Sweden, Netherlands
Compare approaches to and understandings of pain, pain medication
Cultural values?
Day 14
What is art?
For anthropologists: ideas, forms, techniques, strategies that humans use to express
themselves; communicate creativity, inspiration
- Art “encounter” – not just created but received by other
Anthropological approaches
- How is art embedded in community?
o Norms, values, mental maps, systems
- Fine vs popular art
o How do power dynamics affect what’s considered “fine”
- Is there a universal aesthetic that characterizes human art?
o Universal gaze? Intrinsic way of perceiving art that lets us recognize it
o Moving from “primitive” hierarchies
Case study – great basin basketry
- For 100+ years, Washo, Paiute, Shoshone baskets collected by outsiders and displayed
in collections, galleries, museums
o Usually in glass, under dim light, no touching or interaction
Virtual exhibit
o Indigenous understandings are different:
Meant for use
Extension of weaver’s spirit
Baskets have spirit and want interaction
Blessings with water
Ethnomusicology
- Music within cultural context
- In text:
o African-american girls’ skipping rhymes, playground games – gaunt
o Kinetic orality: body movement + voice
o Influence of “game songs” on African-american men’s pop music from 1950s
o Down down baby – nelly, “country grammar”
Lyrics change (masculinity, marijuana…), rhythms and patterns remain
Visual anthropology
- Production, circulation, consumption of visual images
- Focuses on power of visual representations in art, performance, museums, mass media
to influence culture and identity