A Kachina by Any Other Name: Linguistically Contextualizing Native
... These names have complex etymologies and can be descriptive or more subtly indicative of their origins within a Hopi clan or another indigenous group. They also carry the interpretations of anthropologists who first wrote the names down, capturing their sound on paper with orthography. As powerful s ...
... These names have complex etymologies and can be descriptive or more subtly indicative of their origins within a Hopi clan or another indigenous group. They also carry the interpretations of anthropologists who first wrote the names down, capturing their sound on paper with orthography. As powerful s ...
Pierre Bourdieu as a Post-cultural Theorist
... that Bourdieu’s concept of culture went from being vague and overly general (in the sense inherited from mid-20th century Franco-American anthropology) to being more specific and precise, essentially moving back to the classical, Arnoldian definition of culture as ‘high culture’. Following a related ...
... that Bourdieu’s concept of culture went from being vague and overly general (in the sense inherited from mid-20th century Franco-American anthropology) to being more specific and precise, essentially moving back to the classical, Arnoldian definition of culture as ‘high culture’. Following a related ...
Background to Cross-cultural Communication
... communication’ is obviously more appropriate. In this study, the term ‘cross-cultural communication’ is used. Two words need to be defined: ‘culture’ and ‘communication’. As both have various meanings, depending on the intention of the writer or speaker, for present purposes their definitions are as ...
... communication’ is obviously more appropriate. In this study, the term ‘cross-cultural communication’ is used. Two words need to be defined: ‘culture’ and ‘communication’. As both have various meanings, depending on the intention of the writer or speaker, for present purposes their definitions are as ...
File
... • culture The beliefs, values, behavior, and material objects that constitute a people's way of life. • culture The beliefs, values, behavior, and material objects that constitute a people's way of life. • ethnocentrism The tendency to look at the world primarily from the perspective of one's own cu ...
... • culture The beliefs, values, behavior, and material objects that constitute a people's way of life. • culture The beliefs, values, behavior, and material objects that constitute a people's way of life. • ethnocentrism The tendency to look at the world primarily from the perspective of one's own cu ...
Chapter 1. Introduction After culture: anthropology as radical
... and invidious ways of distinguishing humans, such as by religion or race,2 which have been turned so destructively in the course of history against other human beings. Culture by contrast is democratic: we all have it and, in principle at least, nobody’s is inherently superior to anyone else’s. Now, ...
... and invidious ways of distinguishing humans, such as by religion or race,2 which have been turned so destructively in the course of history against other human beings. Culture by contrast is democratic: we all have it and, in principle at least, nobody’s is inherently superior to anyone else’s. Now, ...
Carola Lentz Culture The making, unmaking and remaking of an
... anthropological conception of culture has led. They consider the concept to be irredeemably diffuse, and at the same time reified and blind to power relations. They insist that anthropologists should abandon it and recommend, as one way forward, that they instead specifically name the various symbol ...
... anthropological conception of culture has led. They consider the concept to be irredeemably diffuse, and at the same time reified and blind to power relations. They insist that anthropologists should abandon it and recommend, as one way forward, that they instead specifically name the various symbol ...
Think about it - Homework Market
... people in the Americas. Despite this long tradition of "amateur" anthropology, anthropology as an organized academic discipline is only about 130 years old. In Europe and the United States in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, the increasing ability to travel to faraway places ...
... people in the Americas. Despite this long tradition of "amateur" anthropology, anthropology as an organized academic discipline is only about 130 years old. In Europe and the United States in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, the increasing ability to travel to faraway places ...
Revisiting Cultural Relativism: Old Prospects for a
... poverty in New York City by supporting quasi-socialist settlement houses. To Boas’s credit, his activism situated his vision of anthropology apart from a seemingly distant or disengaged tolerance that would become associated with cultural relativism. In my view, Boas’s commitment to understanding th ...
... poverty in New York City by supporting quasi-socialist settlement houses. To Boas’s credit, his activism situated his vision of anthropology apart from a seemingly distant or disengaged tolerance that would become associated with cultural relativism. In my view, Boas’s commitment to understanding th ...
Social Experiences and the Concepts of Culture
... Primitive Culture, published in 1871. Tylor said that culture is "that complex whole which includes knowledge, belief, art, law, morals, custom, and any other capabilities and habits acquired by man as a member of society." Of course, it is not limited to men. Women possess and create it as well. Si ...
... Primitive Culture, published in 1871. Tylor said that culture is "that complex whole which includes knowledge, belief, art, law, morals, custom, and any other capabilities and habits acquired by man as a member of society." Of course, it is not limited to men. Women possess and create it as well. Si ...
What Is Culture? The Conceptual Question
... coastal communities, called “outports,” engaged in fishing and logging since the early nineteenth century. In 1911, the geographer J. D. Rogers called Newfoundland’s entire social framework “fishy,” and in many respects it still is, even if Belle’s sons now spend most of their time logging or buildi ...
... coastal communities, called “outports,” engaged in fishing and logging since the early nineteenth century. In 1911, the geographer J. D. Rogers called Newfoundland’s entire social framework “fishy,” and in many respects it still is, even if Belle’s sons now spend most of their time logging or buildi ...
1 - Michigan State University
... understood in the intellectual and popular discourses of its day precisely because it was relativistic and universal. It universalized culture as relative. The construction of what would eventually be labeled “cultural relativism” has continued from that day to this as much outside of explicit consi ...
... understood in the intellectual and popular discourses of its day precisely because it was relativistic and universal. It universalized culture as relative. The construction of what would eventually be labeled “cultural relativism” has continued from that day to this as much outside of explicit consi ...
culture - WordPress.com
... seen as encouraging the development of intellectual and moral virtues; as contrasted with those forms regarded as worthless, or even as detrimental to intellectual and moral development. I will call this the aesthetic sense of the term, and I will capitalize its first letter when using the word in t ...
... seen as encouraging the development of intellectual and moral virtues; as contrasted with those forms regarded as worthless, or even as detrimental to intellectual and moral development. I will call this the aesthetic sense of the term, and I will capitalize its first letter when using the word in t ...
Culture: Can You Take It Anywhere?
... languaculture was to remind readers that language users draw on all kinds of things besides grammar and vocabulary—their biography, the nature of the situation they’re in, history, politics—material from pretty much every discipline that’s ever dealt with people. So my first reaction when UC colleag ...
... languaculture was to remind readers that language users draw on all kinds of things besides grammar and vocabulary—their biography, the nature of the situation they’re in, history, politics—material from pretty much every discipline that’s ever dealt with people. So my first reaction when UC colleag ...
From Culture Areas to Ethnoscapes - Journal of Regional Analysis
... established permanent settlements. In time, with population growth, occupational specialization and social stratification, distinct civilizations emerged. Some settlements grew into large ‗cultural centers‘ of production, creativity and innovation. Also known as ‗culture hearths‘ they were identifie ...
... established permanent settlements. In time, with population growth, occupational specialization and social stratification, distinct civilizations emerged. Some settlements grew into large ‗cultural centers‘ of production, creativity and innovation. Also known as ‗culture hearths‘ they were identifie ...
Cultural History of Britain
... Matthew Arnold (1822-1888) was a preeminent poet of the Victorian era, a lifelong educator, a pioneer in the field of literary criticism, a government official (Inspector of Schools), and an influential public figure. But one of his most enduring legacies is his extensive body of writing on the topi ...
... Matthew Arnold (1822-1888) was a preeminent poet of the Victorian era, a lifelong educator, a pioneer in the field of literary criticism, a government official (Inspector of Schools), and an influential public figure. But one of his most enduring legacies is his extensive body of writing on the topi ...
Substance - Assets - Cambridge University Press
... time occasionally differs from white time, and other ethnic and regional variations are noticeable too: “I’d love you in a New York minute but take my Texas time,” goes a country and western song. Despite noticing the variations, most of us take for granted whatever notion of time is governing us. A ...
... time occasionally differs from white time, and other ethnic and regional variations are noticeable too: “I’d love you in a New York minute but take my Texas time,” goes a country and western song. Despite noticing the variations, most of us take for granted whatever notion of time is governing us. A ...
kottak14e_ppt_ch02
... – Universal traits are the ones that more or less distinguish Homo sapiens from other species: • Biological: a long period of infant dependency, year-round sexuality, and a complex brain • Psychological: common ways in which humans think, feel, and process information • Social: life in groups, famil ...
... – Universal traits are the ones that more or less distinguish Homo sapiens from other species: • Biological: a long period of infant dependency, year-round sexuality, and a complex brain • Psychological: common ways in which humans think, feel, and process information • Social: life in groups, famil ...
Oxymoronic_Civilisations
... pleased to see eclipsed—was much more popular. But all this is truly a thing of the past. Today the anthropological conception of culture reigns supreme. The proof is everywhere—as any regular reader of Encounter knows. Quite aside from the argument presented by C. P. Snow, the distinctively anthrop ...
... pleased to see eclipsed—was much more popular. But all this is truly a thing of the past. Today the anthropological conception of culture reigns supreme. The proof is everywhere—as any regular reader of Encounter knows. Quite aside from the argument presented by C. P. Snow, the distinctively anthrop ...
Cross-Cultural Psychology Bulletin
... Cross-Cultural Psychology Bulletin International Association for Cross-Cultural Psychology ...
... Cross-Cultural Psychology Bulletin International Association for Cross-Cultural Psychology ...
CULTURE, FOR AND AGAINST: PATTERNS OF “CULTURESPEAK
... the treaty-based relationship between Mäori and Pakeha. In fact, multiculturalism and biculturalism are widely regarded as politically antagonistic, incompatible or at the very least unequal (Pearson 1991, 2001:119, 151; but cf Bishop 1992). Even so, these two complexes of ideas have some theoretica ...
... the treaty-based relationship between Mäori and Pakeha. In fact, multiculturalism and biculturalism are widely regarded as politically antagonistic, incompatible or at the very least unequal (Pearson 1991, 2001:119, 151; but cf Bishop 1992). Even so, these two complexes of ideas have some theoretica ...
Evolution and Transmitted Culture
... rapidly cumulative that many evolutionary scientists consider it a species-specific second system of inheritance in humans, distinct from, but interacting with, genetic inheritance (Richerson & Boyd, 2005; Tomasello, 1999). Richerson and Boyd went so far as to argue that transmitted culture is an ad ...
... rapidly cumulative that many evolutionary scientists consider it a species-specific second system of inheritance in humans, distinct from, but interacting with, genetic inheritance (Richerson & Boyd, 2005; Tomasello, 1999). Richerson and Boyd went so far as to argue that transmitted culture is an ad ...
Culture
... national cuisines, recipe files, such as tracking the source of these culturalelements. Similarly, we can observe the habits of other areas of consumption. Habits of dress, fashion, and so on. Other habits directly related to consumer behaviour from a marketing perspective: - shopping - media ...
... national cuisines, recipe files, such as tracking the source of these culturalelements. Similarly, we can observe the habits of other areas of consumption. Habits of dress, fashion, and so on. Other habits directly related to consumer behaviour from a marketing perspective: - shopping - media ...
13 CHAPTER TWO SCIENTIFIC DEFINITIONS OF CULTURE
... development of sciences such as micro-biology. The Oxford English Dictionary records the use of “culture” in 1884 to refer to the preparation of populations of bacteria in controlled laboratory conditions. The impact of this usage communicated a sense of investigating human society in an entirely ob ...
... development of sciences such as micro-biology. The Oxford English Dictionary records the use of “culture” in 1884 to refer to the preparation of populations of bacteria in controlled laboratory conditions. The impact of this usage communicated a sense of investigating human society in an entirely ob ...
L_2_2013
... national cuisines, recipe files, such as tracking the source of these culturalelements. Similarly, we can observe the habits of other areas of consumption. Habits of dress, fashion, and so on. Other habits directly related to consumer behaviour from a marketing perspective: - shopping - media ...
... national cuisines, recipe files, such as tracking the source of these culturalelements. Similarly, we can observe the habits of other areas of consumption. Habits of dress, fashion, and so on. Other habits directly related to consumer behaviour from a marketing perspective: - shopping - media ...
Anthropology and ethnography
... the girl betrothed to one of ama Panci's sons, then the other son might be inclined to cheat on her daughter − note that the judge who particularly berated la Ninde was ama Panci, father of la Fia and of the son betrothed to la Mone's daughter − he was both upset with la Ninde for interfering with h ...
... the girl betrothed to one of ama Panci's sons, then the other son might be inclined to cheat on her daughter − note that the judge who particularly berated la Ninde was ama Panci, father of la Fia and of the son betrothed to la Mone's daughter − he was both upset with la Ninde for interfering with h ...
Oasisamerica
Oasisamerica is a term used by some scholars, primarily Mexican anthropologists, for the broad cultural area defining pre-Columbian southwestern North America. It extends from modern-day Utah down to southern Chihuahua, and from the coast on the Gulf of California eastward to the Río Bravo river valley. Its name comes from its position in relationship with the similar regions of Mesoamerica and nomadic Aridoamerica. The term 'Greater Southwest' is more often used to describe this region.As opposed to their nomadic Aridoamerican neighbors, the Oasisamericans primarily had agricultural societies,