Deck 3: Ethnographic Research: Its History, methods, and Theories

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Question
Anthropologist _______________ is a leading advocacy anthropologist today and a special rapporteur for the United Nations High Commission on Human Rights.

A)Rodolfo Stavenhagen
B)Clifford Geertz
C)Stephen Lansang
D)Gregory Bates
E)Jonathan Marks
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Question
Which of the following best defines applied anthropology?

A)the use of anthropological techniques to better prepare populations for market research and the introduction of capitalism
B)the application of anthropological types of change in order to help indigenous people develop further
C)the use of anthropological knowledge and methods to solve practical problems in communities confronting NEW challenges
D)the implementation of change into indigenous populations only in order to save and preserve them
E)all of the above
Question
All of the following provided data on foreign countries for the purpose of "culture-at-a-distance" studies except _______________.

A)popular films
B)photographs
C)literature
D)telephone conversations
E)NEWspapers
Question
Which anthropologist was the first to carry out an advocacy project within a North American Indian community?

A)Julian Steward
B)Bronislaw Malinowski
C)Margaret Mead
D)Sol Tax
E)Franz Boas
Question
National character studies were most popular during _______________.

A)the Spanish-American War
B)World War I
C)World War II
D)the Vietnam War
E)the Iraq War
Question
The first generation of formal anthropologists began their careers working for _______________.

A)explorers
B)multinational corporations
C)national governments
D)universities
E)museums
Question
Although human beings always have been interested in other human beings,anthropology first began to emerge as a formal discipline during _______________.

A)globalization
B)industrialism
C)colonialism
D)colonization
E)exploration
Question
Ethnographic research that documents endangered cultures is known as _______________.

A)savage anthropology
B)multi-sited anthropology
C)advocacy anthropology
D)primitive ethnography
E)urgent anthropology
Question
One of the first U.S.anthropologists to study acculturation was Margaret Mead in her 1932 fieldwork _______________.

A)on Bali
B)in Samoa
C)among the Omaha Indians
D)among the Navajo Indians
E)among the Mundugumor
Question
Cultural anthropology is composed of which two scholarly components?

A)ethnography and ethnohistory
B)ethnography and ethnology
C)ethnology and ethnohistory
D)ethnohistory and ethnoarchaeology
E)linguistics and ethnography
Question
All of the following are examples of early studies of contemporary state societies except _______________.

A)Alfred Métraux,study of race relations in Brazil
B)Ruth Benedict,study of art styles and creativity in Broadway
C)Hortense Powdermaker,study of mass media in Hollywood
D)Julian Steward,study of industrialization in Kenya
E)all of the above are examples of early studies of contemporary state societies
Question
Why is it important to study peasants?

A)They represent societies that are beginning to develop out of a primitive condition.
B)They are the poorest people in the world.
C)They always cause political rupture.
D)They are the largest social category in the world.
E)all of the above
Question
Research that is community-based and politically involved is called _______________.

A)advocacy anthropology
B)urgent anthropology
C)representative anthropology
D)action anthropology
E)peasant anthropology
Question
Anthropology has sought directly to do each of the following except _______________.

A)document the practice of culture
B)impose a Western and modern approach to life
C)document disappearing cultural practices
D)reconstruct traditional ways of life
E)educate its audience on the importance of culture
Question
The Ayoreo Indians,deeply affected by forces of acculturation,are found in modern-day _______________.

A)Colombia
B)Bolivia
C)Ecuador
D)Mexico
E)Philippines
Question
If an anthropologist works to help indigenous peoples hold onto their ancestral lands,the anthropologist is called a(n)_______________.

A)advocate
B)guerilla
C)representative
D)mentor
E)lobbyist
Question
Which of the following anthropologists was involved in the creation of "culture-at-a-distance" studies?

A)Edward Tylor
B)William Haviland
C)Clifford Geertz
D)Ruth Mead
E)Ruth Benedict
Question
Robert Hitchcock works with the San peoples in southern Africa in order to _______________.

A)ensure their land rights
B)provide jobs for adults
C)improve the health and nutritional status of the children
D)help them obtain representation at the government level
E)encourage them to establish a sense of national identity
Question
Asymmetrical culture contact is called _______________.

A)syncretism
B)acculturation
C)diffusion
D)enculturation
E)synthesis
Question
Laura Nader has called on anthropologists to "study up." What does she mean by this term?

A)Anthropologists should study high altitude peoples and cultures in order to understand adaptation.
B)Anthropologists should people of a higher class than themselves.
C)Anthropologists should study the elites of a society and not only the common people.
D)Anthropologists should intensify their studies and become more involved in advocacy anthropology.
E)none of the above
Question
A research method in which one learns about a group's beliefs and behaviors through social participation and personal observation within the community is called _______________.

A)participant interviewing
B)observational participation
C)observant participation
D)participant observation
E)participational observation
Question
Personal life histories are examples of _______________.

A)qualitative data
B)quantitative data
C)key data
D)quantum cultural data
E)archival data
Question
When researchers use things such as photographs in order to prompt people to speak with them about a particular topic,these are called _______________.

A)soliciting devices
B)eliciting devices
C)prompting devices
D)circular conversations
E)participant tools
Question
Anthropologists use _______________.

A)only quantitative data
B)only qualitative data
C)both quantitative and qualitative data
D)only data gathered by participant observation
E)only data related to foreign societies
Question
Unstructured,open-ended conversations in everyday life are called _______________.

A)chatting
B)formal interviews
C)informal interviews
D)advised interviews
E)arbitrary interviews
Question
Individuals who live and work far from their original homelands form part of a growing population that is classified as _______________.

A)international
B)multinational
C)migratory
D)contemporary
E)diasporic
Question
Anthropologists advise that _______________.

A)it is best to do your first fieldwork as part of a team of researchers,some of them experienced
B)it is best to do your first fieldwork in your own culture so that you become experienced
C)it is best to do your first fieldwork in a culture other than your own
D)it is best to work in societies that are different from your own but now located very far away from where you live
E)it is best to study peasants as part of your first fieldwork experience
Question
A worldwide interconnected landscape with multiple intertwining and overlapping peoples and cultures on the move is known as a(n)_______________.

A)multi-sited ethnography
B)globalscape
C)immigrant population
D)diasporic population
E)transnational population
Question
Extended on-location research to gather detailed information about a society's culture is called _______________.

A)ethnographic character research
B)a cyberethnography
C)a multi-sited ethnography
D)ethnographic fieldwork
E)digital ethnography
Question
Ethnographic study of online "imagined communities" is called _______________.

A)cyberethnography
B)digital ethnography
C)multi-sited ethnography
D)ethnography without borders
E)computer ethnography
Question
Margaret Mead and Gregory Bateson did their most significant photographic research in _______________.

A)Tonga
B)Hawaii
C)Indonesia
D)Samoa
E)Bali
Question
The primary method in the anthropologist's toolkit,regardless of the time period,has always been _______________.

A)mapping
B)participant observation
C)random sampling
D)formal interviews
E)mentoring
Question
Why is it important to map the field site with information from the local people?

A)much cultural information is contained on a key consultant's map
B)the map will contain local place names
C)the map will contain information on local features and land use in the area
D)social information will be contained on the map
E)all of the above
Question
What is the first step in doing ethnographic fieldwork?

A)doing preparatory research
B)choosing a research question
C)participant observation on site
D)gathering data
E)choosing a theoretical approach
Question
The members of a society who work most closely with the anthropologist to provide an understanding of cultural phenomena are called _______________.

A)primary consultants
B)key consultants
C)cultural leaders
D)culture brokers
E)key leader co-participants
Question
What is GPS?

A)a free government mapping service
B)cartographic digital technology
C)a satellite device that allows for precise measuring
D)a map based on the key consultants' information
E)only a and b
Question
Gregory Bateson was trained by Alfred C.Haddon,who is credited with being the first anthropologist to _______________.

A)use key consultants
B)interview locals in their own language
C)do participant observations
D)map maps of an area
E)use ethnographic film
Question
Andrea Louie's multi-sited field research project focused on _______________.

A)child-rearing techniques
B)land use and land rights
C)transnational identity
D)problems of migration and underemployment
E)problems of government representation
Question
Globalization has given rise to a NEW form of research and analysis known as _______________.

A)diasporic anthropology
B)multi-sited ethnography
C)national character studies
D)advocacy anthropology
E)culture-at-a-distance studies
Question
Which of the following is not an example of quantitative data?

A)demographic patterns
B)amounts of crops grown
C)personal life histories
D)number of dwellings
E)migratory patterns
Question
Most anthropologists face _______________.

A)mental challenges in the field
B)physical challenges in the field
C)physical harm in the field
D)all of the above
E)a and b
Question
In what country do we find the Trobriand Islands?

A)Canada
B)Japan
C)Indonesia
D)Australia
E)Papua NEW Guinea
Question
Why is validation in ethnographic research so difficult?

A)observational access is often limited
B)there may be insufficient funding for the research
C)there may be logistical difficulties in reaching the site
D)there may be problems in obtaining permission to do the study
E)all of the above
Question
In her fieldsite,because of political unrest,June Nash was accused of _______________.

A)stealing
B)being a CIA agent
C)being a Bolivian spy
D)slander
E)none of the above
Question
Why were there differences between the original field research of Malinowski and that of Weiner some 60 years later?

A)differences in field methodology
B)different theoretical interests
C)changes over time
D)differences in researchers' genders
E)all of these
Question
The ethical obligation to self-monitor while doing ethnographic research (constantly checking and re-checking personal or cultural biases)is called _______________.

A)rationality
B)reading
C)reflection
D)reflexivity
E)none of these
Question
Lincoln Keiser was treated with great disdain and suspicion in his fieldsite in _______________ because of his study focus on feuding.

A)Myanmar
B)China
C)India
D)Pakistan
E)Burma
Question
When was the first portable synchronous-sound camera invented?

A)1955
B)1950
C)1960
D)1965
E)1970
Question
A woman among the Ju/'hoansi called Richard Lee _______________.

A)uncle
B)husband
C)son
D)nephew
E)father
Question
What is ethnohistory?

A)the study of cultures recently passed
B)the study of ancient cultures
C)a classical study of Rome and Greece
D)the ethnographic study of historical documents
E)all of the above
Question
Both William Crocker and Richard Lee were _______________.

A)adopted into networks of kinship at their fieldsites
B)awarded the honor of outstanding fieldworkers by the anthropological association
C)considered master fieldworkers by quantitative researchers
D)pioneers in the development of field photography
E)all of the above
Question
What type of descent is found associated with Trobriand society?

A)matrilineal
B)patrilineal
C)ambilineal
D)bilateral
E)none of the above
Question
The Human Relations Area Files (HRAF)is _______________.

A)an ethnographic and archaeological database
B) an archaeological database
C) an ethnographic database
D) a linguistic database
E) none of the above
Question
A tool that researchers rely on to learn about a culture by examining their behaviors and beliefs through social interaction is ________________________.

A)theory building
B)participant observation
C)close examination
D)focus group observation
E)questionnaire use
Question
Which anthropologist did a "re-study" of the Trobriand Islanders?

A)Annette Weiner
B)Margaret Mead
C)Hortense Powdermaker
D)Bronislaw Malinowski
E)Ruth Benedict
Question
In order to minimize the impact of subjectivity,the anthropologist should consider all of the following except _______________.

A)how people think they really behave
B)the people's ideal sense of how a society should be run
C)what the anthropologist actually sees happening
D)what the anthropologist observes in his/her own culture
E)a,b,and c,above
Question
An explanation in science of natural phenomena,supported by a reliable body of data,is called a(n)_______________.

A)theory
B)hypothesis
C)fact
D)doctrine
E)intuition
Question
What was the focus of Annette Weiner's research in the Trobriands?

A)women's reproductive work
B)women's productive work
C)the village religious structure
D)men's canoeing and trade relations
E)migratory patterns and changes in family structure
Question
Ethnographic research that documents endangered cultures is known as _________________________ .

A)ethnography
B)component anthropology
C)cyberethnography
D)hypermedia ethnography
E)urgent ethnography
Question
Margaret Mead argued that ethnographers should make much more effective use of _______________.

A)photography
B)mapping
C)interviews
D)participant observation
E)collecting material artifacts
Question
The materialist perspective is a theoretical approach that stresses the primacy of the cultural _______________.

A)structure
B)superstructure
C)substructure
D)infrastructure
E)all of the above
Question
Globalization has given rise to a NEW type of anthropology research and analysis called _______________________ ethnography.

A)Globalization
B)Pluralistic
C)Multi-sited
D)Glocalization
E)Emerging
Question
Urgent anthropology used to be known as ______________________________ .

A)ethnography
B)salvage anthropology
C)critical anthropology
D)speedy anthropology
E)historical anthropology
Question
A formal,recorded agreement to participate in research is called _______________.

A)informed consensus
B)informed consent
C)informal consent
D)informal consensus
E)a research agreement
Question
Between 4,000 and 9,000 years ago,the human population in the Middle East increased _______________.

A)ten-fold
B)twenty-fold
C)fifty-fold
D)sixty-fold
E)none of these
Question
By the late 1800s,which groups were sponsoring anthropologists' expeditions to collect cultural artifacts?

A)Museums
B)Universities
C)Adventure clubs
D)Historic societies
E)Federal governments
Question
The HRAF has data currently on about _______________ societies.

A)1000
B)800
C)400
D) 100
E)75
Question
A key consultant used to be known as an _______________________________.

A)informant
B)accelerator
C)intuitive participant
D)internal informant
E)external informant
Question
Marvin Harris argues that pork was not generally raised in the Middle East historically because _______________.

A)it was considered sinful in all Middle Eastern religions
B)some Middle eastern societies owned all of the land and prevented pig-raising
C)no ethnic group in the Middle East would eat pork
D)pig-raising threatened the natural ecosystem
E)pig-raising was economically inefficient in such a humid environment
Question
If an anthropologists is studying a culture of the recent past using oral histories,accounts of explorers,missionaries,and traders and also through the analysis of such records as land titles,birth and death records,and other archival materials;that anthropologist is doing _______________.

A)ethnology
B)biography
C)autobiography
D)ethnohistory
E)ethnography
Question
The theoretical approach of structural-functionalism is primarily associated with the _______________ School.

A)German
B)American
C)Dutch
D)British
E)French
Question
Quantitative data is data which refers to information which is ________________.

A)Excellent in quality
B)Not to be trusted
C)Measurable
D)Nonstatistical in nature
E)Personal information
Question
A indigenous group which is surrounded and resettled by another dominant group is sometimes called an ___________________ _________________________.

A)internal colony
B)external colony
C)internal ethnicity
D)external ethnicity
E)innocent colony
Question
The idealist perspective is a theoretical approach that stresses the primacy of the cultural _______________.

A)infrastructure
B)substructure
C)structure
D)superstructure
E)none of the above
Question
Research that is community based and politically active is __________________________.

A)Political anthropology
B)Social anthropology
C)Sociological anthropology
D)Activist anthropology
E)Advocacy anthropology
Question
____________________ is the term used to refer to what an anthropologist does when they go to a place to observe a cultural activity first hand.

A)First-hand research
B)Second hand research
C)Fieldwork
D)Practice
E)Ethnography
Question
Marxism,neo-evolutionism,and cultural ecology are all considered to be _______________ approaches.

A)ecological
B)political
C)substantivist
D)idealist
E)materialist
Question
The NEW term for salvage anthropology is _____________________________.

A)ethnography
B)urgent anthropology
C)critical anthropology
D)speedy anthropology
E)historical anthropology
Question
Peasant studies came into existence in the ______________ .

A)1960s
B)1890s
C)1900s
D)1950s
E)1960s .
Question
The combination of cultural ecology and political economy is the _______________ approach.

A)ecological politics
B)political ecology
C)cultural economy
D)economic cultural
E)none of the above
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Deck 3: Ethnographic Research: Its History, methods, and Theories
1
Anthropologist _______________ is a leading advocacy anthropologist today and a special rapporteur for the United Nations High Commission on Human Rights.

A)Rodolfo Stavenhagen
B)Clifford Geertz
C)Stephen Lansang
D)Gregory Bates
E)Jonathan Marks
Rodolfo Stavenhagen
2
Which of the following best defines applied anthropology?

A)the use of anthropological techniques to better prepare populations for market research and the introduction of capitalism
B)the application of anthropological types of change in order to help indigenous people develop further
C)the use of anthropological knowledge and methods to solve practical problems in communities confronting NEW challenges
D)the implementation of change into indigenous populations only in order to save and preserve them
E)all of the above
the use of anthropological knowledge and methods to solve practical problems in communities confronting NEW challenges
3
All of the following provided data on foreign countries for the purpose of "culture-at-a-distance" studies except _______________.

A)popular films
B)photographs
C)literature
D)telephone conversations
E)NEWspapers
telephone conversations
4
Which anthropologist was the first to carry out an advocacy project within a North American Indian community?

A)Julian Steward
B)Bronislaw Malinowski
C)Margaret Mead
D)Sol Tax
E)Franz Boas
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 116 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
5
National character studies were most popular during _______________.

A)the Spanish-American War
B)World War I
C)World War II
D)the Vietnam War
E)the Iraq War
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 116 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
The first generation of formal anthropologists began their careers working for _______________.

A)explorers
B)multinational corporations
C)national governments
D)universities
E)museums
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 116 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
Although human beings always have been interested in other human beings,anthropology first began to emerge as a formal discipline during _______________.

A)globalization
B)industrialism
C)colonialism
D)colonization
E)exploration
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 116 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
8
Ethnographic research that documents endangered cultures is known as _______________.

A)savage anthropology
B)multi-sited anthropology
C)advocacy anthropology
D)primitive ethnography
E)urgent anthropology
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 116 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
One of the first U.S.anthropologists to study acculturation was Margaret Mead in her 1932 fieldwork _______________.

A)on Bali
B)in Samoa
C)among the Omaha Indians
D)among the Navajo Indians
E)among the Mundugumor
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 116 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
Cultural anthropology is composed of which two scholarly components?

A)ethnography and ethnohistory
B)ethnography and ethnology
C)ethnology and ethnohistory
D)ethnohistory and ethnoarchaeology
E)linguistics and ethnography
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 116 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
11
All of the following are examples of early studies of contemporary state societies except _______________.

A)Alfred Métraux,study of race relations in Brazil
B)Ruth Benedict,study of art styles and creativity in Broadway
C)Hortense Powdermaker,study of mass media in Hollywood
D)Julian Steward,study of industrialization in Kenya
E)all of the above are examples of early studies of contemporary state societies
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 116 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
12
Why is it important to study peasants?

A)They represent societies that are beginning to develop out of a primitive condition.
B)They are the poorest people in the world.
C)They always cause political rupture.
D)They are the largest social category in the world.
E)all of the above
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 116 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
13
Research that is community-based and politically involved is called _______________.

A)advocacy anthropology
B)urgent anthropology
C)representative anthropology
D)action anthropology
E)peasant anthropology
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 116 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
14
Anthropology has sought directly to do each of the following except _______________.

A)document the practice of culture
B)impose a Western and modern approach to life
C)document disappearing cultural practices
D)reconstruct traditional ways of life
E)educate its audience on the importance of culture
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 116 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
15
The Ayoreo Indians,deeply affected by forces of acculturation,are found in modern-day _______________.

A)Colombia
B)Bolivia
C)Ecuador
D)Mexico
E)Philippines
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 116 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
16
If an anthropologist works to help indigenous peoples hold onto their ancestral lands,the anthropologist is called a(n)_______________.

A)advocate
B)guerilla
C)representative
D)mentor
E)lobbyist
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 116 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
17
Which of the following anthropologists was involved in the creation of "culture-at-a-distance" studies?

A)Edward Tylor
B)William Haviland
C)Clifford Geertz
D)Ruth Mead
E)Ruth Benedict
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 116 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
18
Robert Hitchcock works with the San peoples in southern Africa in order to _______________.

A)ensure their land rights
B)provide jobs for adults
C)improve the health and nutritional status of the children
D)help them obtain representation at the government level
E)encourage them to establish a sense of national identity
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 116 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
Asymmetrical culture contact is called _______________.

A)syncretism
B)acculturation
C)diffusion
D)enculturation
E)synthesis
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 116 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
20
Laura Nader has called on anthropologists to "study up." What does she mean by this term?

A)Anthropologists should study high altitude peoples and cultures in order to understand adaptation.
B)Anthropologists should people of a higher class than themselves.
C)Anthropologists should study the elites of a society and not only the common people.
D)Anthropologists should intensify their studies and become more involved in advocacy anthropology.
E)none of the above
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 116 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
A research method in which one learns about a group's beliefs and behaviors through social participation and personal observation within the community is called _______________.

A)participant interviewing
B)observational participation
C)observant participation
D)participant observation
E)participational observation
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 116 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
22
Personal life histories are examples of _______________.

A)qualitative data
B)quantitative data
C)key data
D)quantum cultural data
E)archival data
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 116 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
23
When researchers use things such as photographs in order to prompt people to speak with them about a particular topic,these are called _______________.

A)soliciting devices
B)eliciting devices
C)prompting devices
D)circular conversations
E)participant tools
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 116 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
Anthropologists use _______________.

A)only quantitative data
B)only qualitative data
C)both quantitative and qualitative data
D)only data gathered by participant observation
E)only data related to foreign societies
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 116 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
25
Unstructured,open-ended conversations in everyday life are called _______________.

A)chatting
B)formal interviews
C)informal interviews
D)advised interviews
E)arbitrary interviews
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 116 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
26
Individuals who live and work far from their original homelands form part of a growing population that is classified as _______________.

A)international
B)multinational
C)migratory
D)contemporary
E)diasporic
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 116 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
27
Anthropologists advise that _______________.

A)it is best to do your first fieldwork as part of a team of researchers,some of them experienced
B)it is best to do your first fieldwork in your own culture so that you become experienced
C)it is best to do your first fieldwork in a culture other than your own
D)it is best to work in societies that are different from your own but now located very far away from where you live
E)it is best to study peasants as part of your first fieldwork experience
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 116 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
28
A worldwide interconnected landscape with multiple intertwining and overlapping peoples and cultures on the move is known as a(n)_______________.

A)multi-sited ethnography
B)globalscape
C)immigrant population
D)diasporic population
E)transnational population
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 116 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
29
Extended on-location research to gather detailed information about a society's culture is called _______________.

A)ethnographic character research
B)a cyberethnography
C)a multi-sited ethnography
D)ethnographic fieldwork
E)digital ethnography
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 116 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
30
Ethnographic study of online "imagined communities" is called _______________.

A)cyberethnography
B)digital ethnography
C)multi-sited ethnography
D)ethnography without borders
E)computer ethnography
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31
Margaret Mead and Gregory Bateson did their most significant photographic research in _______________.

A)Tonga
B)Hawaii
C)Indonesia
D)Samoa
E)Bali
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32
The primary method in the anthropologist's toolkit,regardless of the time period,has always been _______________.

A)mapping
B)participant observation
C)random sampling
D)formal interviews
E)mentoring
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33
Why is it important to map the field site with information from the local people?

A)much cultural information is contained on a key consultant's map
B)the map will contain local place names
C)the map will contain information on local features and land use in the area
D)social information will be contained on the map
E)all of the above
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34
What is the first step in doing ethnographic fieldwork?

A)doing preparatory research
B)choosing a research question
C)participant observation on site
D)gathering data
E)choosing a theoretical approach
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35
The members of a society who work most closely with the anthropologist to provide an understanding of cultural phenomena are called _______________.

A)primary consultants
B)key consultants
C)cultural leaders
D)culture brokers
E)key leader co-participants
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36
What is GPS?

A)a free government mapping service
B)cartographic digital technology
C)a satellite device that allows for precise measuring
D)a map based on the key consultants' information
E)only a and b
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37
Gregory Bateson was trained by Alfred C.Haddon,who is credited with being the first anthropologist to _______________.

A)use key consultants
B)interview locals in their own language
C)do participant observations
D)map maps of an area
E)use ethnographic film
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38
Andrea Louie's multi-sited field research project focused on _______________.

A)child-rearing techniques
B)land use and land rights
C)transnational identity
D)problems of migration and underemployment
E)problems of government representation
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39
Globalization has given rise to a NEW form of research and analysis known as _______________.

A)diasporic anthropology
B)multi-sited ethnography
C)national character studies
D)advocacy anthropology
E)culture-at-a-distance studies
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40
Which of the following is not an example of quantitative data?

A)demographic patterns
B)amounts of crops grown
C)personal life histories
D)number of dwellings
E)migratory patterns
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41
Most anthropologists face _______________.

A)mental challenges in the field
B)physical challenges in the field
C)physical harm in the field
D)all of the above
E)a and b
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42
In what country do we find the Trobriand Islands?

A)Canada
B)Japan
C)Indonesia
D)Australia
E)Papua NEW Guinea
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43
Why is validation in ethnographic research so difficult?

A)observational access is often limited
B)there may be insufficient funding for the research
C)there may be logistical difficulties in reaching the site
D)there may be problems in obtaining permission to do the study
E)all of the above
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44
In her fieldsite,because of political unrest,June Nash was accused of _______________.

A)stealing
B)being a CIA agent
C)being a Bolivian spy
D)slander
E)none of the above
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Unlock for access to all 116 flashcards in this deck.
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45
Why were there differences between the original field research of Malinowski and that of Weiner some 60 years later?

A)differences in field methodology
B)different theoretical interests
C)changes over time
D)differences in researchers' genders
E)all of these
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46
The ethical obligation to self-monitor while doing ethnographic research (constantly checking and re-checking personal or cultural biases)is called _______________.

A)rationality
B)reading
C)reflection
D)reflexivity
E)none of these
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47
Lincoln Keiser was treated with great disdain and suspicion in his fieldsite in _______________ because of his study focus on feuding.

A)Myanmar
B)China
C)India
D)Pakistan
E)Burma
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48
When was the first portable synchronous-sound camera invented?

A)1955
B)1950
C)1960
D)1965
E)1970
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49
A woman among the Ju/'hoansi called Richard Lee _______________.

A)uncle
B)husband
C)son
D)nephew
E)father
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50
What is ethnohistory?

A)the study of cultures recently passed
B)the study of ancient cultures
C)a classical study of Rome and Greece
D)the ethnographic study of historical documents
E)all of the above
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51
Both William Crocker and Richard Lee were _______________.

A)adopted into networks of kinship at their fieldsites
B)awarded the honor of outstanding fieldworkers by the anthropological association
C)considered master fieldworkers by quantitative researchers
D)pioneers in the development of field photography
E)all of the above
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52
What type of descent is found associated with Trobriand society?

A)matrilineal
B)patrilineal
C)ambilineal
D)bilateral
E)none of the above
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53
The Human Relations Area Files (HRAF)is _______________.

A)an ethnographic and archaeological database
B) an archaeological database
C) an ethnographic database
D) a linguistic database
E) none of the above
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54
A tool that researchers rely on to learn about a culture by examining their behaviors and beliefs through social interaction is ________________________.

A)theory building
B)participant observation
C)close examination
D)focus group observation
E)questionnaire use
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55
Which anthropologist did a "re-study" of the Trobriand Islanders?

A)Annette Weiner
B)Margaret Mead
C)Hortense Powdermaker
D)Bronislaw Malinowski
E)Ruth Benedict
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56
In order to minimize the impact of subjectivity,the anthropologist should consider all of the following except _______________.

A)how people think they really behave
B)the people's ideal sense of how a society should be run
C)what the anthropologist actually sees happening
D)what the anthropologist observes in his/her own culture
E)a,b,and c,above
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k this deck
57
An explanation in science of natural phenomena,supported by a reliable body of data,is called a(n)_______________.

A)theory
B)hypothesis
C)fact
D)doctrine
E)intuition
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58
What was the focus of Annette Weiner's research in the Trobriands?

A)women's reproductive work
B)women's productive work
C)the village religious structure
D)men's canoeing and trade relations
E)migratory patterns and changes in family structure
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59
Ethnographic research that documents endangered cultures is known as _________________________ .

A)ethnography
B)component anthropology
C)cyberethnography
D)hypermedia ethnography
E)urgent ethnography
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k this deck
60
Margaret Mead argued that ethnographers should make much more effective use of _______________.

A)photography
B)mapping
C)interviews
D)participant observation
E)collecting material artifacts
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
61
The materialist perspective is a theoretical approach that stresses the primacy of the cultural _______________.

A)structure
B)superstructure
C)substructure
D)infrastructure
E)all of the above
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Unlock for access to all 116 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
62
Globalization has given rise to a NEW type of anthropology research and analysis called _______________________ ethnography.

A)Globalization
B)Pluralistic
C)Multi-sited
D)Glocalization
E)Emerging
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Unlock Deck
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63
Urgent anthropology used to be known as ______________________________ .

A)ethnography
B)salvage anthropology
C)critical anthropology
D)speedy anthropology
E)historical anthropology
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Unlock Deck
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64
A formal,recorded agreement to participate in research is called _______________.

A)informed consensus
B)informed consent
C)informal consent
D)informal consensus
E)a research agreement
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Unlock for access to all 116 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
65
Between 4,000 and 9,000 years ago,the human population in the Middle East increased _______________.

A)ten-fold
B)twenty-fold
C)fifty-fold
D)sixty-fold
E)none of these
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Unlock for access to all 116 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
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66
By the late 1800s,which groups were sponsoring anthropologists' expeditions to collect cultural artifacts?

A)Museums
B)Universities
C)Adventure clubs
D)Historic societies
E)Federal governments
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67
The HRAF has data currently on about _______________ societies.

A)1000
B)800
C)400
D) 100
E)75
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68
A key consultant used to be known as an _______________________________.

A)informant
B)accelerator
C)intuitive participant
D)internal informant
E)external informant
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Unlock Deck
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69
Marvin Harris argues that pork was not generally raised in the Middle East historically because _______________.

A)it was considered sinful in all Middle Eastern religions
B)some Middle eastern societies owned all of the land and prevented pig-raising
C)no ethnic group in the Middle East would eat pork
D)pig-raising threatened the natural ecosystem
E)pig-raising was economically inefficient in such a humid environment
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Unlock for access to all 116 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
70
If an anthropologists is studying a culture of the recent past using oral histories,accounts of explorers,missionaries,and traders and also through the analysis of such records as land titles,birth and death records,and other archival materials;that anthropologist is doing _______________.

A)ethnology
B)biography
C)autobiography
D)ethnohistory
E)ethnography
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71
The theoretical approach of structural-functionalism is primarily associated with the _______________ School.

A)German
B)American
C)Dutch
D)British
E)French
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72
Quantitative data is data which refers to information which is ________________.

A)Excellent in quality
B)Not to be trusted
C)Measurable
D)Nonstatistical in nature
E)Personal information
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Unlock Deck
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73
A indigenous group which is surrounded and resettled by another dominant group is sometimes called an ___________________ _________________________.

A)internal colony
B)external colony
C)internal ethnicity
D)external ethnicity
E)innocent colony
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74
The idealist perspective is a theoretical approach that stresses the primacy of the cultural _______________.

A)infrastructure
B)substructure
C)structure
D)superstructure
E)none of the above
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Unlock Deck
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75
Research that is community based and politically active is __________________________.

A)Political anthropology
B)Social anthropology
C)Sociological anthropology
D)Activist anthropology
E)Advocacy anthropology
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76
____________________ is the term used to refer to what an anthropologist does when they go to a place to observe a cultural activity first hand.

A)First-hand research
B)Second hand research
C)Fieldwork
D)Practice
E)Ethnography
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77
Marxism,neo-evolutionism,and cultural ecology are all considered to be _______________ approaches.

A)ecological
B)political
C)substantivist
D)idealist
E)materialist
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78
The NEW term for salvage anthropology is _____________________________.

A)ethnography
B)urgent anthropology
C)critical anthropology
D)speedy anthropology
E)historical anthropology
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79
Peasant studies came into existence in the ______________ .

A)1960s
B)1890s
C)1900s
D)1950s
E)1960s .
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80
The combination of cultural ecology and political economy is the _______________ approach.

A)ecological politics
B)political ecology
C)cultural economy
D)economic cultural
E)none of the above
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Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 116 flashcards in this deck.