Deck 3: Studying Culture

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Question
Many of the best early accounts of non-western societies written during the early period of colonialism were written by __________.

A) soldiers
B) governors
C) naturalists
D) Jesuit missionaries
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Question
Malinowski conducted fieldwork in __________.

A) India
B) the Trobriand Islands
C) Egypt
D) Peru
Question
__________ are stories and myths that dramatize actual memories or events in symbolic form consistent with cultural practices in storytelling.

A) Oral Traditions
B) Myths
C) Narratives
D) Genealogies
Question
The founder of the functionalist perspective in anthropology was __________.

A) Clifford Geertz
B) Edward Tylor
C) Franz Boas
D) Bronislaw Malinowski
Question
The three stages of cultural development proposed by Lewis Henry Morgan were __________.

A) band, tribe, and clan
B) savagery, barbarism, and civilization
C) band, tribe, and state
D) primitive, chiefdom, and civilization
Question
Early anthropologists such as Edward Tylor and Lewis Henry Morgan developed __________.

A) highly systematic fieldwork techniques
B) critical approaches to evolutionary theory
C) comparative evolutionary approaches for studying cultures
D) non-theoretical, descriptive schools of anthropology
Question
Functionalism, as developed by Malinowski, was most influential in __________ anthropology.

A) British
B) French
C) American
D) German
Question
The Quillayute, Northern Paiute, and Delaware narratives may describe __________.

A) the origins of their tribes
B) ancient climatic and ecological events
C) ancient marriage ceremonies
D) hunting rituals
Question
__________ can be described as the study of the social functions of cultural traits.

A) Interpretive anthropology
B) Evolutionary anthropology
C) Functionalism
D) Materialism
Question
Most early anthropologists during the 19th century __________.

A) conducted ethnographic fieldwork
B) ignored the accounts of travelers and missionaries
C) were unilinear evolutionists
D) were interpretive in their analyses of cultures
Question
The founder of professional anthropology in the United States was __________.

A) Bronislaw Malinowski
B) Franz Boas
C) Margaret Mead
D) Lewis Henry Morgan
Question
The earliest origins of anthropology lie in __________.

A) the accounts and diaries written by early European travelers
B) Greek histories
C) Medieval bestiaries
D) naturalists such as Charles Darwin
Question
The role of a __________ is to attempt an explanation that helps people understand why cultures originate, develop in certain ways, and change over time.

A) methodology
B) cultural theory
C) cross-cultural comparison
D) relativistic worldview
Question
Boas conducted most of his fieldwork __________.

A) in the southwestern United States
B) in central Mexico
C) in the Caribbean
D) on the northwest coast of North America
Question
Cultural narratives that have validity as artifacts of culture and experience.

A) oral traditions
B) myths
C) narratives
D) genealogies
Question
Franz Boas introduced the idea of __________ into American anthropology.

A) evolutionary stages
B) cultural relativism
C) arm chair anthropology
D) conflict oriented explanations
Question
The Supreme Court of Canada ruled in a land claim suit in 1997 that __________ have validity as legal testimony and as records of the past.

A) rock art symbology
B) Native American narratives
C) Native American oral traditions
D) treaties unsigned by Native Americans
Question
Lewis Henry Morgan was the first to link __________ with economic systems.

A) technology
B) religion
C) geographic region
D) kinship
Question
Morgan proposed a __________ stages evolutionary scheme for all societies based on many comparative criteria.

A) 3
B) 5
C) 8
D) 10
Question
Franz Boas stressed __________ in anthropological work.

A) evolutionary theory
B) culture change
C) empiricism
D) cross-cultural comparison
Question
A/An __________ explanation of why Hindus in India do not eat cows is that they are sacred animals.

A) materialist
B) emic
C) etic
D) objective
Question
Social problems or issues, especially those that arise as a result of the distribution of power in society, are the focus of __________ perspectives.

A) conflict
B) materialist
C) structuralist
D) interpretive
Question
Environmental adaptation, technologies, and methods of acquiring food are emphasized in __________ perspectives in anthropology.

A) functionalist
B) symbolic
C) interpretive
D) materialist
Question
__________ proposes that cultural differences can be explained by differences in forms or conceptual categories rather than in meanings.

A) Functionalism
B) Materialism
C) Structuralism
D) Cultural Ecology
Question
Indigenous societies often were based on __________, principles that community members had fundamentally equal rights to available resources and to social respect.

A) egalitarian ethics
B) cross-cultural comparisons
C) etic perspectives
D) polyphony
Question
According to __________, culture is a unique system of symbols with multiple layers of meaning.

A) interpretive anthropology
B) cultural materialism
C) conflict theory
D) structuralism
Question
Claude Levi-Strauss developed structuralism to try to answer the question of why __________ around the world seem so similar.

A) myths
B) marriages
C) ethical systems
D) religions
Question
Conflict theorists often concentrate on __________ and how they penetrate and transform indigenous cultures to suit their own needs.

A) religions
B) agriculturalists
C) settlers
D) capitalist institutions
Question
Cultural ecology was developed by __________ in the 1930s.

A) Marvin Harris
B) Julian Steward
C) Margaret Mead
D) Claude Levi-Strauss
Question
A/An __________ explanation of why Hindus in India do not eat cows is that cows are too important to farm labor to be eaten.

A) interpretive
B) emic
C) etic
D) subjective
Question
__________ views cultural differences to be best understood as complex webs of meaning rather than forms.

A) Functionalism
B) Materialism
C) Structuralism
D) Interpretive anthropology
Question
Functionalism has the shortcoming of overemphasizing __________ at the expense of __________.

A) conflict, stability
B) groups, individuals
C) stability, societal change
D) individuals, groups
Question
__________ is a topic of great concern to most conflict theorists.

A) Warfare
B) Deviance
C) Gender
D) Kinship
Question
Which of the following modern anthropological methods of analyzing cultures contrasts with structural-functional analyses?

A) interpretive
B) evolutionary
C) empirical
D) conflict
Question
Cultural materialism is greatly influenced by __________.

A) Adam Smith
B) Thomas Malthus
C) Karl Marx
D) Max Weber
Question
Interpretive anthropology as proposed by __________ was developed as a result of fieldwork in Java.

A) Margaret Mead
B) Clifford Geertz
C) Julian Steward
D) Marvin Harris
Question
__________ views are objective and based on outsiders' views so that they resemble explanations by observers from another culture.

A) Emic
B) Etic
C) Structural
D) Materialist
Question
__________ considers cultural diversity to stem from the differences in the forms by which people express universal meanings.

A) Interpretive anthropology
B) Structuralism
C) Cultural ecology
D) Evolutionary anthropology
Question
__________ views are subjective and based on insiders' views so that they resemble as much as possible the explanations that people have for their own culture.

A) Emic
B) Etic
C) Structural
D) Irrational
Question
__________ understands society and culture to be derived from its economic foundation.

A) Functionalism
B) Structuralism
C) Cultural Ecology
D) Cultural Materialism
Question
Before fieldwork can begin, an anthropologist must __________.

A) choose a research problem
B) gather the majority of their data off-site
C) interpret the majority of their data
D) choose a field site in a remote, foreign location
Question
The largest attempt to gather comparative data from all cultures around the world into one source has been __________.

A) the annual American Anthropological Association meetings
B) the Human Genome Project
C) the Human Relations Area Files
D) the United Nations Human Rights Declaration
Question
Cross-cultural comparisons are __________.

A) a means of understanding cultural differences and similarities through data analysis rather than direct observation
B) made by conducting fieldwork in multiple cultures
C) no longer made in twentieth century anthropology
D) are only done on cultures discovered prior to 1950
Question
In anthropology, fieldwork means __________.

A) having people answer questionnaires
B) compiling census data
C) conducting polls
D) living and interacting with the group of people under study
Question
The anthropology of anthropology is called __________.

A) self-analysis
B) anthropological ethnography
C) reflexive anthropology
D) critical anthropology
Question
A common focus in ethnohistories is __________.

A) migration patterns
B) the impact of colonialism
C) indigenous economies
D) mythology
Question
Typically fieldwork on an anthropologist's first research project will last about __________.

A) two months
B) six months
C) one year
D) two years
Question
Which of the following is a common problem that anthropologists experience while doing fieldwork?

A) creating surveys
B) finding activists that will help resolve local conflicts and disputes
C) culture shock
D) bribing informants
Question
All can be problematic when attempting to conduct large-scale cross-cultural comparative studies EXCEPT which of the following?

A) data may not be comparable
B) practices and traits may be taken out of their full cultural contexts
C) imputing causality
D) no database exists that codifies all known cultural facts and details about the world's peoples
Question
Which of the following was developed in the tradition of postmodernism?

A) structuralism
B) interpretive anthropology
C) reflexive anthropology
D) conflict perspectives
Question
The hallmark of anthropological methods since the early twentieth century has been __________.

A) surveys
B) fieldwork
C) statistical analysis
D) excavation
Question
Which of the following anthropological perspectives would be useful for understanding the impact warfare between societies has on cultural norms and practices?

A) conflict
B) materialist
C) structuralist
D) interpretive
Question
The many voices of people from all the different segments and groups that make up society.

A) polyphony
B) multiculturalism
C) multivocality
D) cultural complexity
Question
Culture shock, or __________, is a common problem for anthropologists after they first arrive to do fieldwork.

A) the inability to accept new ethical frameworks
B) the feeling of being out of place in unfamiliar surroundings
C) the unfriendliness of people at the new location
D) the inability of people at the new location to accept the anthropologist
Question
During which of the following stages of fieldwork will an anthropologist attempt to learn the rules for entering and residing in their chosen country of study?

A) choosing a problem
B) conducting preliminary research
C) gathering qualitative data
D) interpreting data
Question
Ethnohistorians are interested in __________.

A) using historical documents rather than fieldwork to do anthropology
B) constructing a global cultural world history based on the HRAF
C) reconstructing and interpreting the history of indigenous peoples from their point of view
D) creating a more scientific basis for the study of cultural histories
Question
Which of the following is an advantage to obtaining residence in a native household when conducting fieldwork?

A) it makes it easy to pay people for information
B) allows for close proximity to people through family networks
C) all the data can be obtained from one family
D) it provides a partisan viewpoint
Question
In response to the recognition that cultures or societies are not uniform and that many people cooperate and compete in forming a society, anthropologists have __________.

A) begun to resort exclusively to cultural life histories
B) begun to focus on smaller and smaller groups of people
C) begun to shift towards national personality studies
D) have begun to reflexively question whose voices and views appear in their writing and whose do not
Question
One problem with the representation of the societies studied by anthropologist has been __________.

A) that there were really fewer differences than anthropologists imagined
B) the relativistic perspectives used to discuss other cultures
C) the assumption that cultures were essentially static and unchanging
D) that they are projected to be an accumulation of many individual voices and perspectives
Question
Which of the following two perspectives emphasize including multiple voices and perspectives within a community?

A) materialist and structuralist
B) reflexive and conflict
C) materialist and interpretive
D) interpretive and conflict
Question
Cultural life histories are __________.

A) historical records on important people in an area
B) long-term research programs that track a culture over many years
C) biographies of individuals within a particular culture
D) voices of people from all the different segments and groups that make up a society
Question
Although sometimes necessary, interpreters are less desirable than knowing the language during fieldwork because __________.

A) many of the nuances of meaning are lost in translation
B) few people are willing to talk with a translator present
C) translators are expensive and shorten the time an anthropologist can do fieldwork
D) translators often are dishonest and do not convey accurately information informants present
Question
An example of urban anthropology is Judith Friedenburg's work on __________ in New York City.

A) elderly Puerto Ricans
B) firemen
C) office workers
D) bicycle messengers
Question
The Sanos found that __________ changed their relationships with people in town for the better after their first year in "Riverfront" Wisconsin.

A) the birth of their son
B) their newly acquired American citizenship
C) the death of the local mayor
D) their jobs as university professors
Question
Which of the following is an example of quantitative data?

A) relationships between members of households within a community
B) descriptions of food gathering techniques
C) sources of income
D) information about how people trace their genealogical relationships
Question
In response to the usual tendency to present peoples in anthropological writings as "others," anthropologists have in many cases turned to presenting __________ between themselves and the person in their research as their form of writing.

A) contests
B) dialogues
C) cooperation
D) contracts
Question
Which of the following is classified as an unethical practice?

A) Testifying in court proceedings regarding native territories and indigenous land claims.
B) Sharing ethnographic data with another anthropologist.
C) Staging ethnographic film footage.
D) Providing compensation for interviews.
Question
The full disclosure of research goals, methods, types of analyses, and reporting procedures is called __________.

A) informed consent
B) polyphany
C) surveys
D) ethnohistory
Question
When carrying out research in urban areas, anthropologists often use methods similar to those of __________.

A) historians
B) economists
C) psychologists
D) sociologists
Question
The organization that formulated the Code of Ethics to which many anthropologists adhere.

A) American Anthropological Association
B) American Association of Cultural Anthropologists
C) National Science Foundation
D) United Nations
Question
Anthropologists have traditionally presented the peoples in their studies as __________ who are different and exotic.

A) primitives
B) heroes
C) others
D) individuals
Question
One limitation to gathering information that is almost impossible to overcome is the __________ of the anthropologist.

A) language ability
B) gender
C) nationality
D) age
Question
One of the preconceptions that the researchers in "Riverfront" Wisconsin found to be false was the expected __________ of the population there.

A) friendliness
B) homogeneity
C) heterogeneity
D) class consciousness
Question
Gathering data through participant observation might mean using which of the following techniques?

A) following one person for a day without their knowledge
B) searching HRAF
C) having conversations with people
D) sending mass surveys
Question
All of the following is true of urban anthropologists EXCEPT __________.

A) they focus on studying an entire town or city
B) they use methods that differ significantly from anthropologists conducting research in rural areas
C) they often investigate a specific topic within a defined subculture
D) they primarily use participant observation rather than surveys to gather data
Question
Sometimes anthropologists from other countries work in the United States; an example is the work of __________ researchers in "Riverfront" Wisconsin.

A) Turkish
B) French
C) Japanese
D) Brazilian
Question
Often, anthropological research in urban areas focuses on __________ and/or particular topics.

A) mass cultures
B) whole communities
C) subcultures or small groups
D) national problems
Question
A field of cultural anthropology that focuses on studying the lives of people living in cities or urban neighborhoods.

A) interpretive anthropology
B) reflexive anthropology
C) ecological anthropology
D) urban anthropology
Question
Scott Youngstedt focused his research on how Hausa migrants to the capital city of __________ build social networks in their new settings to create a sense of community and familiarity.

A) Vietnam
B) Niger
C) Tanzania
D) Mongolia
Question
Which of the following is an example of qualitative data?

A) relationships between members of households within a community
B) population trends in births
C) fluctuations in community size
D) sources of income
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Deck 3: Studying Culture
1
Many of the best early accounts of non-western societies written during the early period of colonialism were written by __________.

A) soldiers
B) governors
C) naturalists
D) Jesuit missionaries
Jesuit missionaries
2
Malinowski conducted fieldwork in __________.

A) India
B) the Trobriand Islands
C) Egypt
D) Peru
the Trobriand Islands
3
__________ are stories and myths that dramatize actual memories or events in symbolic form consistent with cultural practices in storytelling.

A) Oral Traditions
B) Myths
C) Narratives
D) Genealogies
Narratives
4
The founder of the functionalist perspective in anthropology was __________.

A) Clifford Geertz
B) Edward Tylor
C) Franz Boas
D) Bronislaw Malinowski
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 93 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
5
The three stages of cultural development proposed by Lewis Henry Morgan were __________.

A) band, tribe, and clan
B) savagery, barbarism, and civilization
C) band, tribe, and state
D) primitive, chiefdom, and civilization
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 93 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
Early anthropologists such as Edward Tylor and Lewis Henry Morgan developed __________.

A) highly systematic fieldwork techniques
B) critical approaches to evolutionary theory
C) comparative evolutionary approaches for studying cultures
D) non-theoretical, descriptive schools of anthropology
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 93 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
Functionalism, as developed by Malinowski, was most influential in __________ anthropology.

A) British
B) French
C) American
D) German
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 93 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
8
The Quillayute, Northern Paiute, and Delaware narratives may describe __________.

A) the origins of their tribes
B) ancient climatic and ecological events
C) ancient marriage ceremonies
D) hunting rituals
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 93 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
__________ can be described as the study of the social functions of cultural traits.

A) Interpretive anthropology
B) Evolutionary anthropology
C) Functionalism
D) Materialism
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 93 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
Most early anthropologists during the 19th century __________.

A) conducted ethnographic fieldwork
B) ignored the accounts of travelers and missionaries
C) were unilinear evolutionists
D) were interpretive in their analyses of cultures
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 93 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
11
The founder of professional anthropology in the United States was __________.

A) Bronislaw Malinowski
B) Franz Boas
C) Margaret Mead
D) Lewis Henry Morgan
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 93 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
12
The earliest origins of anthropology lie in __________.

A) the accounts and diaries written by early European travelers
B) Greek histories
C) Medieval bestiaries
D) naturalists such as Charles Darwin
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 93 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
13
The role of a __________ is to attempt an explanation that helps people understand why cultures originate, develop in certain ways, and change over time.

A) methodology
B) cultural theory
C) cross-cultural comparison
D) relativistic worldview
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 93 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
14
Boas conducted most of his fieldwork __________.

A) in the southwestern United States
B) in central Mexico
C) in the Caribbean
D) on the northwest coast of North America
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 93 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
15
Cultural narratives that have validity as artifacts of culture and experience.

A) oral traditions
B) myths
C) narratives
D) genealogies
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 93 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
16
Franz Boas introduced the idea of __________ into American anthropology.

A) evolutionary stages
B) cultural relativism
C) arm chair anthropology
D) conflict oriented explanations
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 93 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
17
The Supreme Court of Canada ruled in a land claim suit in 1997 that __________ have validity as legal testimony and as records of the past.

A) rock art symbology
B) Native American narratives
C) Native American oral traditions
D) treaties unsigned by Native Americans
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 93 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
18
Lewis Henry Morgan was the first to link __________ with economic systems.

A) technology
B) religion
C) geographic region
D) kinship
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 93 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
Morgan proposed a __________ stages evolutionary scheme for all societies based on many comparative criteria.

A) 3
B) 5
C) 8
D) 10
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 93 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
20
Franz Boas stressed __________ in anthropological work.

A) evolutionary theory
B) culture change
C) empiricism
D) cross-cultural comparison
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 93 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
A/An __________ explanation of why Hindus in India do not eat cows is that they are sacred animals.

A) materialist
B) emic
C) etic
D) objective
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 93 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
22
Social problems or issues, especially those that arise as a result of the distribution of power in society, are the focus of __________ perspectives.

A) conflict
B) materialist
C) structuralist
D) interpretive
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 93 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
23
Environmental adaptation, technologies, and methods of acquiring food are emphasized in __________ perspectives in anthropology.

A) functionalist
B) symbolic
C) interpretive
D) materialist
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 93 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
__________ proposes that cultural differences can be explained by differences in forms or conceptual categories rather than in meanings.

A) Functionalism
B) Materialism
C) Structuralism
D) Cultural Ecology
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 93 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
25
Indigenous societies often were based on __________, principles that community members had fundamentally equal rights to available resources and to social respect.

A) egalitarian ethics
B) cross-cultural comparisons
C) etic perspectives
D) polyphony
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 93 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
26
According to __________, culture is a unique system of symbols with multiple layers of meaning.

A) interpretive anthropology
B) cultural materialism
C) conflict theory
D) structuralism
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 93 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
27
Claude Levi-Strauss developed structuralism to try to answer the question of why __________ around the world seem so similar.

A) myths
B) marriages
C) ethical systems
D) religions
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 93 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
28
Conflict theorists often concentrate on __________ and how they penetrate and transform indigenous cultures to suit their own needs.

A) religions
B) agriculturalists
C) settlers
D) capitalist institutions
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 93 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
29
Cultural ecology was developed by __________ in the 1930s.

A) Marvin Harris
B) Julian Steward
C) Margaret Mead
D) Claude Levi-Strauss
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 93 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
30
A/An __________ explanation of why Hindus in India do not eat cows is that cows are too important to farm labor to be eaten.

A) interpretive
B) emic
C) etic
D) subjective
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 93 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
31
__________ views cultural differences to be best understood as complex webs of meaning rather than forms.

A) Functionalism
B) Materialism
C) Structuralism
D) Interpretive anthropology
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 93 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
32
Functionalism has the shortcoming of overemphasizing __________ at the expense of __________.

A) conflict, stability
B) groups, individuals
C) stability, societal change
D) individuals, groups
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 93 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
33
__________ is a topic of great concern to most conflict theorists.

A) Warfare
B) Deviance
C) Gender
D) Kinship
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 93 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
34
Which of the following modern anthropological methods of analyzing cultures contrasts with structural-functional analyses?

A) interpretive
B) evolutionary
C) empirical
D) conflict
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 93 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
35
Cultural materialism is greatly influenced by __________.

A) Adam Smith
B) Thomas Malthus
C) Karl Marx
D) Max Weber
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 93 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
36
Interpretive anthropology as proposed by __________ was developed as a result of fieldwork in Java.

A) Margaret Mead
B) Clifford Geertz
C) Julian Steward
D) Marvin Harris
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 93 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
37
__________ views are objective and based on outsiders' views so that they resemble explanations by observers from another culture.

A) Emic
B) Etic
C) Structural
D) Materialist
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 93 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
38
__________ considers cultural diversity to stem from the differences in the forms by which people express universal meanings.

A) Interpretive anthropology
B) Structuralism
C) Cultural ecology
D) Evolutionary anthropology
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 93 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
39
__________ views are subjective and based on insiders' views so that they resemble as much as possible the explanations that people have for their own culture.

A) Emic
B) Etic
C) Structural
D) Irrational
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 93 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
40
__________ understands society and culture to be derived from its economic foundation.

A) Functionalism
B) Structuralism
C) Cultural Ecology
D) Cultural Materialism
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 93 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
41
Before fieldwork can begin, an anthropologist must __________.

A) choose a research problem
B) gather the majority of their data off-site
C) interpret the majority of their data
D) choose a field site in a remote, foreign location
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 93 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
42
The largest attempt to gather comparative data from all cultures around the world into one source has been __________.

A) the annual American Anthropological Association meetings
B) the Human Genome Project
C) the Human Relations Area Files
D) the United Nations Human Rights Declaration
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 93 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
43
Cross-cultural comparisons are __________.

A) a means of understanding cultural differences and similarities through data analysis rather than direct observation
B) made by conducting fieldwork in multiple cultures
C) no longer made in twentieth century anthropology
D) are only done on cultures discovered prior to 1950
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 93 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
44
In anthropology, fieldwork means __________.

A) having people answer questionnaires
B) compiling census data
C) conducting polls
D) living and interacting with the group of people under study
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 93 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
45
The anthropology of anthropology is called __________.

A) self-analysis
B) anthropological ethnography
C) reflexive anthropology
D) critical anthropology
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 93 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
46
A common focus in ethnohistories is __________.

A) migration patterns
B) the impact of colonialism
C) indigenous economies
D) mythology
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 93 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
47
Typically fieldwork on an anthropologist's first research project will last about __________.

A) two months
B) six months
C) one year
D) two years
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48
Which of the following is a common problem that anthropologists experience while doing fieldwork?

A) creating surveys
B) finding activists that will help resolve local conflicts and disputes
C) culture shock
D) bribing informants
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49
All can be problematic when attempting to conduct large-scale cross-cultural comparative studies EXCEPT which of the following?

A) data may not be comparable
B) practices and traits may be taken out of their full cultural contexts
C) imputing causality
D) no database exists that codifies all known cultural facts and details about the world's peoples
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50
Which of the following was developed in the tradition of postmodernism?

A) structuralism
B) interpretive anthropology
C) reflexive anthropology
D) conflict perspectives
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51
The hallmark of anthropological methods since the early twentieth century has been __________.

A) surveys
B) fieldwork
C) statistical analysis
D) excavation
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52
Which of the following anthropological perspectives would be useful for understanding the impact warfare between societies has on cultural norms and practices?

A) conflict
B) materialist
C) structuralist
D) interpretive
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53
The many voices of people from all the different segments and groups that make up society.

A) polyphony
B) multiculturalism
C) multivocality
D) cultural complexity
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54
Culture shock, or __________, is a common problem for anthropologists after they first arrive to do fieldwork.

A) the inability to accept new ethical frameworks
B) the feeling of being out of place in unfamiliar surroundings
C) the unfriendliness of people at the new location
D) the inability of people at the new location to accept the anthropologist
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55
During which of the following stages of fieldwork will an anthropologist attempt to learn the rules for entering and residing in their chosen country of study?

A) choosing a problem
B) conducting preliminary research
C) gathering qualitative data
D) interpreting data
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56
Ethnohistorians are interested in __________.

A) using historical documents rather than fieldwork to do anthropology
B) constructing a global cultural world history based on the HRAF
C) reconstructing and interpreting the history of indigenous peoples from their point of view
D) creating a more scientific basis for the study of cultural histories
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57
Which of the following is an advantage to obtaining residence in a native household when conducting fieldwork?

A) it makes it easy to pay people for information
B) allows for close proximity to people through family networks
C) all the data can be obtained from one family
D) it provides a partisan viewpoint
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58
In response to the recognition that cultures or societies are not uniform and that many people cooperate and compete in forming a society, anthropologists have __________.

A) begun to resort exclusively to cultural life histories
B) begun to focus on smaller and smaller groups of people
C) begun to shift towards national personality studies
D) have begun to reflexively question whose voices and views appear in their writing and whose do not
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59
One problem with the representation of the societies studied by anthropologist has been __________.

A) that there were really fewer differences than anthropologists imagined
B) the relativistic perspectives used to discuss other cultures
C) the assumption that cultures were essentially static and unchanging
D) that they are projected to be an accumulation of many individual voices and perspectives
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60
Which of the following two perspectives emphasize including multiple voices and perspectives within a community?

A) materialist and structuralist
B) reflexive and conflict
C) materialist and interpretive
D) interpretive and conflict
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61
Cultural life histories are __________.

A) historical records on important people in an area
B) long-term research programs that track a culture over many years
C) biographies of individuals within a particular culture
D) voices of people from all the different segments and groups that make up a society
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Unlock for access to all 93 flashcards in this deck.
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62
Although sometimes necessary, interpreters are less desirable than knowing the language during fieldwork because __________.

A) many of the nuances of meaning are lost in translation
B) few people are willing to talk with a translator present
C) translators are expensive and shorten the time an anthropologist can do fieldwork
D) translators often are dishonest and do not convey accurately information informants present
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63
An example of urban anthropology is Judith Friedenburg's work on __________ in New York City.

A) elderly Puerto Ricans
B) firemen
C) office workers
D) bicycle messengers
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64
The Sanos found that __________ changed their relationships with people in town for the better after their first year in "Riverfront" Wisconsin.

A) the birth of their son
B) their newly acquired American citizenship
C) the death of the local mayor
D) their jobs as university professors
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65
Which of the following is an example of quantitative data?

A) relationships between members of households within a community
B) descriptions of food gathering techniques
C) sources of income
D) information about how people trace their genealogical relationships
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66
In response to the usual tendency to present peoples in anthropological writings as "others," anthropologists have in many cases turned to presenting __________ between themselves and the person in their research as their form of writing.

A) contests
B) dialogues
C) cooperation
D) contracts
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67
Which of the following is classified as an unethical practice?

A) Testifying in court proceedings regarding native territories and indigenous land claims.
B) Sharing ethnographic data with another anthropologist.
C) Staging ethnographic film footage.
D) Providing compensation for interviews.
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68
The full disclosure of research goals, methods, types of analyses, and reporting procedures is called __________.

A) informed consent
B) polyphany
C) surveys
D) ethnohistory
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69
When carrying out research in urban areas, anthropologists often use methods similar to those of __________.

A) historians
B) economists
C) psychologists
D) sociologists
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70
The organization that formulated the Code of Ethics to which many anthropologists adhere.

A) American Anthropological Association
B) American Association of Cultural Anthropologists
C) National Science Foundation
D) United Nations
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71
Anthropologists have traditionally presented the peoples in their studies as __________ who are different and exotic.

A) primitives
B) heroes
C) others
D) individuals
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72
One limitation to gathering information that is almost impossible to overcome is the __________ of the anthropologist.

A) language ability
B) gender
C) nationality
D) age
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73
One of the preconceptions that the researchers in "Riverfront" Wisconsin found to be false was the expected __________ of the population there.

A) friendliness
B) homogeneity
C) heterogeneity
D) class consciousness
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74
Gathering data through participant observation might mean using which of the following techniques?

A) following one person for a day without their knowledge
B) searching HRAF
C) having conversations with people
D) sending mass surveys
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75
All of the following is true of urban anthropologists EXCEPT __________.

A) they focus on studying an entire town or city
B) they use methods that differ significantly from anthropologists conducting research in rural areas
C) they often investigate a specific topic within a defined subculture
D) they primarily use participant observation rather than surveys to gather data
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76
Sometimes anthropologists from other countries work in the United States; an example is the work of __________ researchers in "Riverfront" Wisconsin.

A) Turkish
B) French
C) Japanese
D) Brazilian
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77
Often, anthropological research in urban areas focuses on __________ and/or particular topics.

A) mass cultures
B) whole communities
C) subcultures or small groups
D) national problems
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k this deck
78
A field of cultural anthropology that focuses on studying the lives of people living in cities or urban neighborhoods.

A) interpretive anthropology
B) reflexive anthropology
C) ecological anthropology
D) urban anthropology
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79
Scott Youngstedt focused his research on how Hausa migrants to the capital city of __________ build social networks in their new settings to create a sense of community and familiarity.

A) Vietnam
B) Niger
C) Tanzania
D) Mongolia
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80
Which of the following is an example of qualitative data?

A) relationships between members of households within a community
B) population trends in births
C) fluctuations in community size
D) sources of income
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Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 93 flashcards in this deck.