Deck 2: Doing Cultural Anthropology

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Question
Early anthropologists who relied on travelers and missionaries for their fieldwork data were called:

A)Armchair anthropologists.
B)Novices.
C)Native anthropologists.
D)Secondhand anthropologists.
E)Early scholars.
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Question
The fieldwork technique that involves gathering cultural data by observing people's behavior and participating in their lives is called:

A)Cross-cultural survey.
B)Participant observation.
C)Laboratory experimentation.
D)Structured interview.
E)Stratified random sampling.
Question
Which of the following best describes an etic perspective in research?

A)Studying agricultural techniques by measuring the fertility of the soil in laboratory samples.
B)Studying religion by interviewing people about their belief systems.
C)Collecting recipes from informants in order to track culinary traditions.
D)Interviewing respondents about their thoughts on the political organization of their community.
E)Following herders and writing down their life histories.
Question
Anthropological interview techniques:

A)Are always the same from field project to field project.
B)Always involve the same processes and same steps of procedure.
C)Are no longer used in contemporary fieldwork.
D)Have been adapted from philosophy.
E)Are highly varied and are situation-specific.
Question
The Human Relations Area Files (HRAF)is:

A)A database that provides cross-cultural data on a limited number of societies.
B)A database on all cultures involved in global warfare.
C)An institution that specializes in anthropological fieldwork.
D)A group of anthropologists that works in more than a single culture.
E)A database that provides cross-cultural data on all complex societies.
Question
What is the primary goal of emic research?

A)Help insiders make more effective changes to their culture over time.
B)Help governments better manage minority populations.
C)Help outsiders determine which cultures are more effective in particular environments.
D)Help insiders gain a better understanding of their own culture.
E)Help outsiders understand what it means to be a member of another culture.
Question
Individuals who serve as guides and teachers for anthropologists in the culture in which they do fieldwork are called by all of the following terms except:

A)Consultants.
B)Managers.
C)Interlocutors.
D)Informants.
E)Respondents.
Question
All of the following are associated with Franz Boas,except:

A)He was a critic of evolution.
B)He was the first professor of anthropology at Columbia University.
C)He was a champion of human rights.
D)He did his fieldwork in the Trobriand Islands.
E)He trained a generation of U.S.fieldworkers.
Question
How is Malinowski's approach to the study of cultures different from Boas'?

A)Malinowski was an evolutionist and Boas was a critic of evolutionism.
B)Their approaches are similar,except that Franz Boas did not actually carry out fieldwork.
C)Boas focused on the study of child-rearing,while Malinowski focused on the study of history and body measurements.
D)Malinowski emphasized the notion of function in society,while Boas focused on the study of history and adaptation of culture.
E)Boas focused on the study of history and adaptation,and Malinowski focused on the study of child-rearing.
Question
What do anthropologists call the feelings of alienation and helplessness that result from rapid immersion in a new and different culture?

A)Cross-cultural shock.
B)Culture shock.
C)Cultural entropy.
D)Alienation orientation.
E)Psychological solipsism.
Question
Malinowski's and Boas' practices of anthropology were alike in many ways as well.All of the following are things that they shared except:

A)Both were committed fieldworkers.
B)Both saw other cultures/societies as fully rational.
C)Both valued the study of history as essential to a deeper understand of societies.
D)Both were scholars who opposed racism.
E)Both innovated the approach to fieldwork in anthropology.
Question
Which of the following has been a hallmark of American anthropology?

A)Ethnocentrism.
B)Ethnology.
C)Participant observation.
D)Multiculturalism.
E)Holism.
Question
The function of an Institutional Review Board (IRB)is to:

A)Certify and approve departments of anthropology.
B)Suggest disciplinary actions against researchers who violate ethical standards.
C)Approve,monitor,and review all university research involving human subjects.
D)Review articles submitted to academic journals prior to publication.
E)Fund anthropological research.
Question
Applying one's own cultural standards of value,worth,and morality to another culture is called:

A)Ethnocentrism.
B)Participant observation.
C)Cultural relativism.
D)Ethnography.
E)Postmodernism.
Question
In place of the artificially controlled laboratory,anthropologists rely primarily on:

A)Ethnography and collaborative research.
B)Cross-cultural comparison and life histories.
C)Ethnology and mapping.
D)Ethnography and cross-cultural comparison.
E)Life histories and mapping.
Question
The Human Relations Area Files:

A)Does not allow for cross-cultural comparison.
B)Represents multiple researchers using a single perspective.
C)Involves multiple perspectives and indexed data.
D)Is no longer active today.
E)Is not available in computer searchable formats.
Question
Lewis Henry Morgan and Edward Tylor were influenced deeply by the evolutionary theories of:

A)Franz Boas.
B)Charles Darwin.
C)Bronislaw Malinowski.
D)Margaret Mead.
E)Carolus Linnaeus.
Question
Lewis Henry Morgan and Edward Tylor classified small-scale societies as:

A)Savage.
B)Barbarian.
C)Primitive.
D)Childlike.
E)Civilized.
Question
Boas insisted that anthropologists must value a culture on its own terms.This idea is called:

A)Logical positivism.
B)Postmodernism.
C)Phenomenology.
D)Cultural relativism.
E)Dualism.
Question
How would you describe Lewis Henry Morgan's and Edward Tylor's evolutionary theories?

A)It is the study of how humans have changed from simple to complex communication and transportation systems.
B)It is the study of how societies have harnessed more energy for production over time.
C)It is the study of how the human body has changed physically from earlier to later forms,sometimes even changing species.
D)It is the study of the history of human society from simple technology and social institutions to complex ones.
E)It is the study of how native people classify their natural world.
Question
In anthropology,the issue of human rights:

A)Is not relevant,because anthropologists believe in cultural relativism.
B)Can be difficult,as different cultures define rights differently.
C)Is at the forefront of doing anthropological research,as researchers are not allowed to work in countries where there is warfare.
D)Is not important,because there are no inalienable human rights.
E)Prevents anthropologists from doing research overseas.
Question
A major point of the ethnography "Body Ritual among the Nacirema" is to:

A)Show how foolish people's rituals are.
B)Help us look at our own culture from a different perspective.
C)Promote practices of preventive medicine.
D)Increase our respect for primitive cultures.
E)Put a little laughter into our dreary lives.
Question
The gathering and interpretation of information based on intensive,firsthand study is called ethnography.
Question
Franz Boas spent most of his professional career at the University of Berlin in Germany.
Question
Vincent Lyon-Callo works with homeless people.His style of anthropology is best described as:

A)Symbolic and interpretive.
B)Functionalism.
C)Psychological.
D)Engaged.
E)Ecological.
Question
Which of the following was primarily known as a native anthropologist?

A)Zora Neale Hurston
B)Franz Boas
C)Bronislaw Malinowski
D)Vincent Lyon-Callo
E)James Spradley
Question
For the academic community,a critical problem with secret research is:

A)It may endanger the lives of the anthropologists who pursue it.
B)The scientific community has no way to assess its validity.
C)It is almost always used for illegal or immoral purposes.
D)It is unlikely to provide benefits to either anthropologists or the people who are the subjects of such research.
E)It can rarely be used to support the tenure and promotion of anthropology professors.
Question
Delmos Jones' study of voluntary organizations among an African-American community in the United States showed him that:

A)No one worked consistently for the organizations unless they were paid for their work.
B)Voluntary organizations are highly successful when founded by minority leaders.
C)His work as a native anthropologist was at the center of the success the African-American community experienced in cultural identity.
D)There was considerable dissent between leadership of the organizations and the members.
E)Native anthropology has little or no value in the discipline.
Question
What is the "gray zone" that Philippe Bourgois describes in his work among the homeless and drug addicts in San Francisco?

A)It is a geographical area in which drug exchanges take place.
B)It is a term used to refer to homeless shelters and parks where these individuals interact.
C)It is a morally ambiguous space that blurs the lines between victims and perpetrators.
D)It is a term used to describe under-employment because it leads to the destruction of their lives.
E)It is a judicial term to describe exchanges that are morally wrong,but not illegal.
Question
Why did anthropology pay little attention to women prior to the 1970s? All of the following are correct except:

A)Anthropologists assumed that men's activities were political and more important than women's activities,which were domestic.
B)Many anthropologists assumed that men represented women as well and there was no need to study these as separate genders.
C)The majority of practicing anthropologists was male and had little access to working with women in other societies.
D)Anthropologists were all male and there were no women available to study other women.
E)Men's roles were much more public and were more easily studied.
Question
Which theoretical approach argues that no knowledge is objective and all knowledge is influenced by the observer's own culture,social position,and gender?

A)Native anthropology.
B)Feminist anthropology.
C)Postmodernism.
D)Transcendental ethnography.
E)Collaborative ethnography.
Question
Anthropologists have become more sensitive to issues of voice and of power and have begun to reflect more critically on their role as observer in another culture primarily as a result of:

A)Reflectionist ethnology.
B)Franz Boas.
C)Feminist anthropology.
D)Collaborative ethnography.
E)Postmodernism.
Question
Anthropologists and activists have argued that female genital operations are all of the following except:

A)Are grave violations of human rights.
B)Are affirmations of the value of women.
C)Should be legal in European nations.
D)Should be banned in European nations.
E)Should not be studied because they are not important.
Question
You Owe Yourself a Drunk (1970)by James Spradley is an example of a(n)__________ ethnography.

A)Critical
B)Postmodernist
C)Collaborative and engaged
D)Ethnological
E)Reflectionist
Question
Informed consent involves all of the following except:

A)Anthropologists must be involved in a dynamic discussion with participants in order to explain the significance of informed consent.
B)Individuals should understand the risks and benefits inherent in the research.
C)Participants must sign a witnessed contract with the anthropologist indicating that they approve of the research study.
D)Participants must understand how the research data is likely to affect them.
E)Individuals must be free to decide if they want to participate.
Question
The attitude toward magic and ritual among the Nacirema indicates that:

A)Technologically advanced societies do not use magic and ritual.
B)Too much magic and ritual will destroy a society.
C)Magic and ritual can be found in a wide variety of cultures.
D)North American society contains very little magic and ritual.
E)Only the weakest individuals in a society are likely to make use of magic and ritual.
Question
Which sentence best describes the primary anthropological value of research among the homeless and drug addicts,such as that produced by Philippe Bourgois?

A)This research provides accurate information that can help the lives of these individuals by providing more effective recovery programs.
B)The commercial success of research such as this raises awareness of the plight of these individuals and can provide a great deal of money to improve their communities.
C)This research allows families to identify and reconnect with their loved ones and intervene to help them.
D)Through research such as this,the United States is able to provide much more foreign aid to countries that provide the drugs to these addicts.
E)By providing accurate information,research such as this allows us to chronicle the problems with state societies and new models for the future.
Question
All of the following are ethical concerns raised by anthropologists who work in military projects such as Human Terrain Systems (HTS)except:

A)Inability to obtain informed consent.
B)Inability to keep the confidentiality of informants.
C)Secretive nature of so much of the research data.
D)Safety of informants.
E)Inability to pay the informants adequately.
Question
Vincent Lyon-Callo's work with homeless people stresses:

A)The structural causes of homelessness.
B)Incorrect beliefs about the homeless among members of the middle class.
C)The stories and life histories of homeless people.
D)The techniques the homeless use to survive in urban areas.
E)Drug and alcohol use among homeless.
Question
What is the name of the organization that maintains a statement of ethical guidelines for anthropologists?

A)Association for American Anthropologists.
B)American Anthropological Institute.
C)American Anthropological Association.
D)Anthropological Ethics Institute.
E)American Association of Anthropologists.
Question
It is common for anthropologists to feel confused and disoriented when they first arrive to their field sites.
Question
The most important ethical responsibility in anthropological fieldwork is to protect the interests of the people whom you are studying.
Question
Today,virtually all anthropologists rely on Boas' basic and fundamental insights into the discipline.
Question
Engaged anthropologists refrain from choosing sides in political contests.
Question
In the late 19ᵗʰ century,Haddon led a team of scientists to do research on the Torres Straits.This lay the basis for anthropology in the United States.
Question
The Human Terrain Systems was a successful project that allowed anthropologists to work alongside soldiers during war so that cultural sensitivity in the ranks could be maintained.
Question
Anthropologists working for government and industry often conduct secret research and this poses no ethical challenges to the discipline.
Question
The HRAF is an attempt to facilitate cross cultural analysis.
Question
What do anthropologists use as the basis for cross-cultural comparisons?
Question
Bronislaw Malinowski spent only 6 months on the Trobriand Islands.
Question
Postmodernism has been accepted now by all anthropologists.
Question
Phillip Bourgois' work with the homeless and drug addicts in San Francisco has led to a better understanding of issues of economic change,cultural structures,and the effects on individual lives.
Question
Allison Truitt's work on motorcycles in Vietnam had no formal research hypothesis.
Question
Once Franz Boas began teaching women and producing female PhDs,the bias against women in anthropology began to diminish rapidly.
Question
Most anthropological data comes in the form of extensive field notes,audio recordings,and photographs.
Question
Anthropologists rarely work with groups of more than 50 individuals.
Question
What did early 19ᵗʰ century evolutionists mean by the concept of societies as "living fossils"?
Question
Anthropologists generally agree that they should defend Western notions of human rights.
Question
Project Camelot was a great example of collaborative success between anthropology and the U.S.military.
Question
Cross-cultural comparisons began formally in social science with the publication of Herbert Spencer's Descriptive Sociology.
Question
What are the ethical responsibilities for anthropologists in the field?
Question
What is the "gray zone" that Philippe Bourgopis describes as part of his work with the homeless and drug addicts in San Francisco?
Question
Who are the Nacirema,and why is this study important in anthropology?
Question
What was "Project Camelot"?
Question
Name at least 3 challenges associated with collaborative ethnography.
Question
What is FGO,and why is it important in anthropology?
Question
The research of Bronislaw Malinowski focuses on the concept of __________.
Question
What are two criticisms associated with the Human Relations Area Files database?
Question
What changes did postmodernism bring to anthropological fieldwork?
Question
What is cross-cultural comparison,and why is this important in our study of humans and culture? What can we learn through cross-cultural comparisons?
Question
Today,how have ethnographers' roles changed in the field?
Question
Culture shock is a phenomenon that can occur to anyone who faces a new environment where the rules and behaviors are different from what they know.What is the role of culture shock in anthropological fieldwork? When does it occur,and why does it happen? Give examples in your own life when you have faced culture shock.
Question
What is participant observation?
Question
How would you best describe culture shock?
Question
What is a "native" anthropologist?
Question
Compare and contrast the emic and etic perspectives.What are the strengths and weaknesses of each?
Question
Boas' style of fieldwork was known as __________ __________.
Question
What is an "IRB"?
Question
Why is informed consent an important part of doing ethical research?
Question
What are the primary reasons that anthropological research has had such a bias against women during its history?
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Deck 2: Doing Cultural Anthropology
1
Early anthropologists who relied on travelers and missionaries for their fieldwork data were called:

A)Armchair anthropologists.
B)Novices.
C)Native anthropologists.
D)Secondhand anthropologists.
E)Early scholars.
Armchair anthropologists.
2
The fieldwork technique that involves gathering cultural data by observing people's behavior and participating in their lives is called:

A)Cross-cultural survey.
B)Participant observation.
C)Laboratory experimentation.
D)Structured interview.
E)Stratified random sampling.
Participant observation.
3
Which of the following best describes an etic perspective in research?

A)Studying agricultural techniques by measuring the fertility of the soil in laboratory samples.
B)Studying religion by interviewing people about their belief systems.
C)Collecting recipes from informants in order to track culinary traditions.
D)Interviewing respondents about their thoughts on the political organization of their community.
E)Following herders and writing down their life histories.
Studying agricultural techniques by measuring the fertility of the soil in laboratory samples.
4
Anthropological interview techniques:

A)Are always the same from field project to field project.
B)Always involve the same processes and same steps of procedure.
C)Are no longer used in contemporary fieldwork.
D)Have been adapted from philosophy.
E)Are highly varied and are situation-specific.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
5
The Human Relations Area Files (HRAF)is:

A)A database that provides cross-cultural data on a limited number of societies.
B)A database on all cultures involved in global warfare.
C)An institution that specializes in anthropological fieldwork.
D)A group of anthropologists that works in more than a single culture.
E)A database that provides cross-cultural data on all complex societies.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
What is the primary goal of emic research?

A)Help insiders make more effective changes to their culture over time.
B)Help governments better manage minority populations.
C)Help outsiders determine which cultures are more effective in particular environments.
D)Help insiders gain a better understanding of their own culture.
E)Help outsiders understand what it means to be a member of another culture.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
Individuals who serve as guides and teachers for anthropologists in the culture in which they do fieldwork are called by all of the following terms except:

A)Consultants.
B)Managers.
C)Interlocutors.
D)Informants.
E)Respondents.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
8
All of the following are associated with Franz Boas,except:

A)He was a critic of evolution.
B)He was the first professor of anthropology at Columbia University.
C)He was a champion of human rights.
D)He did his fieldwork in the Trobriand Islands.
E)He trained a generation of U.S.fieldworkers.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
How is Malinowski's approach to the study of cultures different from Boas'?

A)Malinowski was an evolutionist and Boas was a critic of evolutionism.
B)Their approaches are similar,except that Franz Boas did not actually carry out fieldwork.
C)Boas focused on the study of child-rearing,while Malinowski focused on the study of history and body measurements.
D)Malinowski emphasized the notion of function in society,while Boas focused on the study of history and adaptation of culture.
E)Boas focused on the study of history and adaptation,and Malinowski focused on the study of child-rearing.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
What do anthropologists call the feelings of alienation and helplessness that result from rapid immersion in a new and different culture?

A)Cross-cultural shock.
B)Culture shock.
C)Cultural entropy.
D)Alienation orientation.
E)Psychological solipsism.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
11
Malinowski's and Boas' practices of anthropology were alike in many ways as well.All of the following are things that they shared except:

A)Both were committed fieldworkers.
B)Both saw other cultures/societies as fully rational.
C)Both valued the study of history as essential to a deeper understand of societies.
D)Both were scholars who opposed racism.
E)Both innovated the approach to fieldwork in anthropology.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
12
Which of the following has been a hallmark of American anthropology?

A)Ethnocentrism.
B)Ethnology.
C)Participant observation.
D)Multiculturalism.
E)Holism.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
13
The function of an Institutional Review Board (IRB)is to:

A)Certify and approve departments of anthropology.
B)Suggest disciplinary actions against researchers who violate ethical standards.
C)Approve,monitor,and review all university research involving human subjects.
D)Review articles submitted to academic journals prior to publication.
E)Fund anthropological research.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
14
Applying one's own cultural standards of value,worth,and morality to another culture is called:

A)Ethnocentrism.
B)Participant observation.
C)Cultural relativism.
D)Ethnography.
E)Postmodernism.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
15
In place of the artificially controlled laboratory,anthropologists rely primarily on:

A)Ethnography and collaborative research.
B)Cross-cultural comparison and life histories.
C)Ethnology and mapping.
D)Ethnography and cross-cultural comparison.
E)Life histories and mapping.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
16
The Human Relations Area Files:

A)Does not allow for cross-cultural comparison.
B)Represents multiple researchers using a single perspective.
C)Involves multiple perspectives and indexed data.
D)Is no longer active today.
E)Is not available in computer searchable formats.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
17
Lewis Henry Morgan and Edward Tylor were influenced deeply by the evolutionary theories of:

A)Franz Boas.
B)Charles Darwin.
C)Bronislaw Malinowski.
D)Margaret Mead.
E)Carolus Linnaeus.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
18
Lewis Henry Morgan and Edward Tylor classified small-scale societies as:

A)Savage.
B)Barbarian.
C)Primitive.
D)Childlike.
E)Civilized.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
Boas insisted that anthropologists must value a culture on its own terms.This idea is called:

A)Logical positivism.
B)Postmodernism.
C)Phenomenology.
D)Cultural relativism.
E)Dualism.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
20
How would you describe Lewis Henry Morgan's and Edward Tylor's evolutionary theories?

A)It is the study of how humans have changed from simple to complex communication and transportation systems.
B)It is the study of how societies have harnessed more energy for production over time.
C)It is the study of how the human body has changed physically from earlier to later forms,sometimes even changing species.
D)It is the study of the history of human society from simple technology and social institutions to complex ones.
E)It is the study of how native people classify their natural world.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
In anthropology,the issue of human rights:

A)Is not relevant,because anthropologists believe in cultural relativism.
B)Can be difficult,as different cultures define rights differently.
C)Is at the forefront of doing anthropological research,as researchers are not allowed to work in countries where there is warfare.
D)Is not important,because there are no inalienable human rights.
E)Prevents anthropologists from doing research overseas.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
22
A major point of the ethnography "Body Ritual among the Nacirema" is to:

A)Show how foolish people's rituals are.
B)Help us look at our own culture from a different perspective.
C)Promote practices of preventive medicine.
D)Increase our respect for primitive cultures.
E)Put a little laughter into our dreary lives.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
23
The gathering and interpretation of information based on intensive,firsthand study is called ethnography.
Unlock Deck
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
Franz Boas spent most of his professional career at the University of Berlin in Germany.
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Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
25
Vincent Lyon-Callo works with homeless people.His style of anthropology is best described as:

A)Symbolic and interpretive.
B)Functionalism.
C)Psychological.
D)Engaged.
E)Ecological.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
26
Which of the following was primarily known as a native anthropologist?

A)Zora Neale Hurston
B)Franz Boas
C)Bronislaw Malinowski
D)Vincent Lyon-Callo
E)James Spradley
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
27
For the academic community,a critical problem with secret research is:

A)It may endanger the lives of the anthropologists who pursue it.
B)The scientific community has no way to assess its validity.
C)It is almost always used for illegal or immoral purposes.
D)It is unlikely to provide benefits to either anthropologists or the people who are the subjects of such research.
E)It can rarely be used to support the tenure and promotion of anthropology professors.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
28
Delmos Jones' study of voluntary organizations among an African-American community in the United States showed him that:

A)No one worked consistently for the organizations unless they were paid for their work.
B)Voluntary organizations are highly successful when founded by minority leaders.
C)His work as a native anthropologist was at the center of the success the African-American community experienced in cultural identity.
D)There was considerable dissent between leadership of the organizations and the members.
E)Native anthropology has little or no value in the discipline.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
29
What is the "gray zone" that Philippe Bourgois describes in his work among the homeless and drug addicts in San Francisco?

A)It is a geographical area in which drug exchanges take place.
B)It is a term used to refer to homeless shelters and parks where these individuals interact.
C)It is a morally ambiguous space that blurs the lines between victims and perpetrators.
D)It is a term used to describe under-employment because it leads to the destruction of their lives.
E)It is a judicial term to describe exchanges that are morally wrong,but not illegal.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
30
Why did anthropology pay little attention to women prior to the 1970s? All of the following are correct except:

A)Anthropologists assumed that men's activities were political and more important than women's activities,which were domestic.
B)Many anthropologists assumed that men represented women as well and there was no need to study these as separate genders.
C)The majority of practicing anthropologists was male and had little access to working with women in other societies.
D)Anthropologists were all male and there were no women available to study other women.
E)Men's roles were much more public and were more easily studied.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
31
Which theoretical approach argues that no knowledge is objective and all knowledge is influenced by the observer's own culture,social position,and gender?

A)Native anthropology.
B)Feminist anthropology.
C)Postmodernism.
D)Transcendental ethnography.
E)Collaborative ethnography.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
32
Anthropologists have become more sensitive to issues of voice and of power and have begun to reflect more critically on their role as observer in another culture primarily as a result of:

A)Reflectionist ethnology.
B)Franz Boas.
C)Feminist anthropology.
D)Collaborative ethnography.
E)Postmodernism.
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33
Anthropologists and activists have argued that female genital operations are all of the following except:

A)Are grave violations of human rights.
B)Are affirmations of the value of women.
C)Should be legal in European nations.
D)Should be banned in European nations.
E)Should not be studied because they are not important.
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34
You Owe Yourself a Drunk (1970)by James Spradley is an example of a(n)__________ ethnography.

A)Critical
B)Postmodernist
C)Collaborative and engaged
D)Ethnological
E)Reflectionist
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35
Informed consent involves all of the following except:

A)Anthropologists must be involved in a dynamic discussion with participants in order to explain the significance of informed consent.
B)Individuals should understand the risks and benefits inherent in the research.
C)Participants must sign a witnessed contract with the anthropologist indicating that they approve of the research study.
D)Participants must understand how the research data is likely to affect them.
E)Individuals must be free to decide if they want to participate.
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36
The attitude toward magic and ritual among the Nacirema indicates that:

A)Technologically advanced societies do not use magic and ritual.
B)Too much magic and ritual will destroy a society.
C)Magic and ritual can be found in a wide variety of cultures.
D)North American society contains very little magic and ritual.
E)Only the weakest individuals in a society are likely to make use of magic and ritual.
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37
Which sentence best describes the primary anthropological value of research among the homeless and drug addicts,such as that produced by Philippe Bourgois?

A)This research provides accurate information that can help the lives of these individuals by providing more effective recovery programs.
B)The commercial success of research such as this raises awareness of the plight of these individuals and can provide a great deal of money to improve their communities.
C)This research allows families to identify and reconnect with their loved ones and intervene to help them.
D)Through research such as this,the United States is able to provide much more foreign aid to countries that provide the drugs to these addicts.
E)By providing accurate information,research such as this allows us to chronicle the problems with state societies and new models for the future.
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38
All of the following are ethical concerns raised by anthropologists who work in military projects such as Human Terrain Systems (HTS)except:

A)Inability to obtain informed consent.
B)Inability to keep the confidentiality of informants.
C)Secretive nature of so much of the research data.
D)Safety of informants.
E)Inability to pay the informants adequately.
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39
Vincent Lyon-Callo's work with homeless people stresses:

A)The structural causes of homelessness.
B)Incorrect beliefs about the homeless among members of the middle class.
C)The stories and life histories of homeless people.
D)The techniques the homeless use to survive in urban areas.
E)Drug and alcohol use among homeless.
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40
What is the name of the organization that maintains a statement of ethical guidelines for anthropologists?

A)Association for American Anthropologists.
B)American Anthropological Institute.
C)American Anthropological Association.
D)Anthropological Ethics Institute.
E)American Association of Anthropologists.
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41
It is common for anthropologists to feel confused and disoriented when they first arrive to their field sites.
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42
The most important ethical responsibility in anthropological fieldwork is to protect the interests of the people whom you are studying.
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43
Today,virtually all anthropologists rely on Boas' basic and fundamental insights into the discipline.
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44
Engaged anthropologists refrain from choosing sides in political contests.
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45
In the late 19ᵗʰ century,Haddon led a team of scientists to do research on the Torres Straits.This lay the basis for anthropology in the United States.
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46
The Human Terrain Systems was a successful project that allowed anthropologists to work alongside soldiers during war so that cultural sensitivity in the ranks could be maintained.
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47
Anthropologists working for government and industry often conduct secret research and this poses no ethical challenges to the discipline.
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48
The HRAF is an attempt to facilitate cross cultural analysis.
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49
What do anthropologists use as the basis for cross-cultural comparisons?
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50
Bronislaw Malinowski spent only 6 months on the Trobriand Islands.
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51
Postmodernism has been accepted now by all anthropologists.
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52
Phillip Bourgois' work with the homeless and drug addicts in San Francisco has led to a better understanding of issues of economic change,cultural structures,and the effects on individual lives.
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53
Allison Truitt's work on motorcycles in Vietnam had no formal research hypothesis.
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54
Once Franz Boas began teaching women and producing female PhDs,the bias against women in anthropology began to diminish rapidly.
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55
Most anthropological data comes in the form of extensive field notes,audio recordings,and photographs.
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56
Anthropologists rarely work with groups of more than 50 individuals.
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57
What did early 19ᵗʰ century evolutionists mean by the concept of societies as "living fossils"?
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58
Anthropologists generally agree that they should defend Western notions of human rights.
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59
Project Camelot was a great example of collaborative success between anthropology and the U.S.military.
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60
Cross-cultural comparisons began formally in social science with the publication of Herbert Spencer's Descriptive Sociology.
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61
What are the ethical responsibilities for anthropologists in the field?
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62
What is the "gray zone" that Philippe Bourgopis describes as part of his work with the homeless and drug addicts in San Francisco?
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63
Who are the Nacirema,and why is this study important in anthropology?
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64
What was "Project Camelot"?
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65
Name at least 3 challenges associated with collaborative ethnography.
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66
What is FGO,and why is it important in anthropology?
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67
The research of Bronislaw Malinowski focuses on the concept of __________.
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68
What are two criticisms associated with the Human Relations Area Files database?
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69
What changes did postmodernism bring to anthropological fieldwork?
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70
What is cross-cultural comparison,and why is this important in our study of humans and culture? What can we learn through cross-cultural comparisons?
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71
Today,how have ethnographers' roles changed in the field?
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72
Culture shock is a phenomenon that can occur to anyone who faces a new environment where the rules and behaviors are different from what they know.What is the role of culture shock in anthropological fieldwork? When does it occur,and why does it happen? Give examples in your own life when you have faced culture shock.
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73
What is participant observation?
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74
How would you best describe culture shock?
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75
What is a "native" anthropologist?
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76
Compare and contrast the emic and etic perspectives.What are the strengths and weaknesses of each?
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77
Boas' style of fieldwork was known as __________ __________.
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78
What is an "IRB"?
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79
Why is informed consent an important part of doing ethical research?
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80
What are the primary reasons that anthropological research has had such a bias against women during its history?
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