doc ANTH 202 First 2 lectures
... -Radcliff-Brown, Fortes, Evans-Pritchard 9all wrote typographies, although they were a bit more in depth) -had broader categories, like “centralized” government which wouldn’t be put together with a culture who’s government was “uncentralized” etc. -pg. 67 Franz Boas: -didn’t like typologies at all ...
... -Radcliff-Brown, Fortes, Evans-Pritchard 9all wrote typographies, although they were a bit more in depth) -had broader categories, like “centralized” government which wouldn’t be put together with a culture who’s government was “uncentralized” etc. -pg. 67 Franz Boas: -didn’t like typologies at all ...
ppt - UNeECC
... Integrated pattern of behaviours, beliefs, and knowledge, which depend on the capacity for social learning and symbolic thought Any human behaviours, which are not the result exclusively of genetics. The way in which different societies represented and classified their experiences. ...
... Integrated pattern of behaviours, beliefs, and knowledge, which depend on the capacity for social learning and symbolic thought Any human behaviours, which are not the result exclusively of genetics. The way in which different societies represented and classified their experiences. ...
Cultural Evolution models and their tragic flaws
... • What about worldviews? • What about language? ...
... • What about worldviews? • What about language? ...
Anthropology 2A Cultural Anthropology
... (cultivators of domesticated plants without the use of modern agricultural techniques) from the Eastern Highlands of Papua New Guinea (Melanesia Culture Area) who have had about 200 of their members die from mysterious causes each year. The locals call it Kuru or “to tremble with fear.” Jerking/shak ...
... (cultivators of domesticated plants without the use of modern agricultural techniques) from the Eastern Highlands of Papua New Guinea (Melanesia Culture Area) who have had about 200 of their members die from mysterious causes each year. The locals call it Kuru or “to tremble with fear.” Jerking/shak ...
Anthropology 2A Cultural Anthropology
... (cultivators of domesticated plants without the use of modern agricultural techniques) from the Eastern Highlands of Papua New Guinea (Melanesia Culture Area) who have had about 200 of their members die from mysterious causes each year. The locals call it Kuru or “to tremble with fear.” Jerking/shak ...
... (cultivators of domesticated plants without the use of modern agricultural techniques) from the Eastern Highlands of Papua New Guinea (Melanesia Culture Area) who have had about 200 of their members die from mysterious causes each year. The locals call it Kuru or “to tremble with fear.” Jerking/shak ...
Exnomination_and_Culture
... Exnomination "If you are a member of a dominant group, your attributes are invisible. Your role in making things the way they are is not noticeable. You believe your culture is apolitical and non-ideological. Your rules become the rules…" ...
... Exnomination "If you are a member of a dominant group, your attributes are invisible. Your role in making things the way they are is not noticeable. You believe your culture is apolitical and non-ideological. Your rules become the rules…" ...
On the Concept of Culture
... complex whole which includes knowledge, belief, art, law, morals, custom, and any other capabilities and habits acquired by man as a member of society.” ---Sir Edward Tylor, 1871 • Man • Civilization • Complex whole ...
... complex whole which includes knowledge, belief, art, law, morals, custom, and any other capabilities and habits acquired by man as a member of society.” ---Sir Edward Tylor, 1871 • Man • Civilization • Complex whole ...
Anthropology 2A Cultural Anthropology
... without the use of modern agricultural techniques) from the Eastern Highlands of Papua New Guinea (Melanesia Culture Area) who have had about 200 of their members die from mysterious causes each year. The locals call it Kuru or “to tremble with fear.” Jerking/shaking/unable to coordinate are the mai ...
... without the use of modern agricultural techniques) from the Eastern Highlands of Papua New Guinea (Melanesia Culture Area) who have had about 200 of their members die from mysterious causes each year. The locals call it Kuru or “to tremble with fear.” Jerking/shaking/unable to coordinate are the mai ...
Anthropology 2A Cultural Anthropology
... without the use of modern agricultural techniques) from the Eastern Highlands of Papua New Guinea (Melanesia Culture Area) who have had about 200 of their members die from mysterious causes each year. The locals call it Kuru or “to tremble with fear.” Jerking/shaking/unable to coordinate are the mai ...
... without the use of modern agricultural techniques) from the Eastern Highlands of Papua New Guinea (Melanesia Culture Area) who have had about 200 of their members die from mysterious causes each year. The locals call it Kuru or “to tremble with fear.” Jerking/shaking/unable to coordinate are the mai ...
Music 1253 Music and Society
... Imperialism except that it allows for active shapers of culture to adapt and evolve from contact with foreign sources, rather than simply having culture imposed on them ...
... Imperialism except that it allows for active shapers of culture to adapt and evolve from contact with foreign sources, rather than simply having culture imposed on them ...
Chapter 9, Lesson 1: The Development of Feudalism MAIN IDEAS
... A. Clovis and the Franks 1. ______________ Church thrived after fall of Rome; many Germans _____________ 2. Key figure in spread of Christianity was _____________, leader of the ___________ a. in ________ defeated last Roman army in Gaul (______________) b. Franks conquered other weak ______________ ...
... A. Clovis and the Franks 1. ______________ Church thrived after fall of Rome; many Germans _____________ 2. Key figure in spread of Christianity was _____________, leader of the ___________ a. in ________ defeated last Roman army in Gaul (______________) b. Franks conquered other weak ______________ ...
View the seminar poster
... Albany and Doctoral Fellow at the New York State Museum. She is an anthropological archaeologist interested in studying prehistoric animal use using geochemical and zooarchaeological analyses. She works primarily in Ukraine, but she has also worked on projects in Northeast America and Mexico. S ...
... Albany and Doctoral Fellow at the New York State Museum. She is an anthropological archaeologist interested in studying prehistoric animal use using geochemical and zooarchaeological analyses. She works primarily in Ukraine, but she has also worked on projects in Northeast America and Mexico. S ...
Concept: History Makers of the Ancient World
... Early Modern Age (1500 – 1800 CE) Period in world history when European expansion and rebirth of knowledge cause the development of new colonies, strong centralized governments, and the early formation of nation-states. Age of Discovery (1418 – 1778 CE) A period in world history when Europeans engag ...
... Early Modern Age (1500 – 1800 CE) Period in world history when European expansion and rebirth of knowledge cause the development of new colonies, strong centralized governments, and the early formation of nation-states. Age of Discovery (1418 – 1778 CE) A period in world history when Europeans engag ...
ancient period
... Many areas outside classical civilizations Ends with massive nomadic invasions ...
... Many areas outside classical civilizations Ends with massive nomadic invasions ...
Europe in the Middle Ages
... No sense of national identity in feudal Europe and little awareness of the outside world (manor and church only) Roman Catholic Church – political and social force Led by the pope Center of activity Only institution to carry on traditions from the Roman Empire Art, culture (music, tapest ...
... No sense of national identity in feudal Europe and little awareness of the outside world (manor and church only) Roman Catholic Church – political and social force Led by the pope Center of activity Only institution to carry on traditions from the Roman Empire Art, culture (music, tapest ...
Culture - marilena beltramini
... institutions, having one or more of each : a ceremonial centre ( a formal gathering place for social and cultural activities ), a system of writing, and a city. ...
... institutions, having one or more of each : a ceremonial centre ( a formal gathering place for social and cultural activities ), a system of writing, and a city. ...
Rome and the Roots of Western Civilization
... • Latin poet, Virgil, writes the Aeneid • He writes that government as being Rome’s most important contribution to civilization. ...
... • Latin poet, Virgil, writes the Aeneid • He writes that government as being Rome’s most important contribution to civilization. ...
SSWH2 The student will identify the major achievements of Chinese
... status of merchants, and the patriarchal family, and explain diffusion to Southeast Asia, Japan, and Korea. SSWH3 The student will examine the political, philosophical, and cultural interaction of Classical Mediterranean societies from 700 BCE to 400 CE. a. Compare the origins and structure of the G ...
... status of merchants, and the patriarchal family, and explain diffusion to Southeast Asia, Japan, and Korea. SSWH3 The student will examine the political, philosophical, and cultural interaction of Classical Mediterranean societies from 700 BCE to 400 CE. a. Compare the origins and structure of the G ...
MS Word file - Student`s Friend
... UNIT 4 - STUDY GUIDE World History & Geography 1 Rev.1/20/2011 ©studentsfriend.com Ancient Greece & Rome: Civilization spreads west Overview: The world’s first civilizations arose in Mesopotamia and Egypt; from there we followed the spread of civilization east to river valleys of India and China. In ...
... UNIT 4 - STUDY GUIDE World History & Geography 1 Rev.1/20/2011 ©studentsfriend.com Ancient Greece & Rome: Civilization spreads west Overview: The world’s first civilizations arose in Mesopotamia and Egypt; from there we followed the spread of civilization east to river valleys of India and China. In ...
Western culture
Western culture, sometimes equated with Western civilization, Western lifestyle, or European civilization, is a term used very broadly to refer to a heritage of social norms, ethical values, traditional customs, belief systems, political systems, and specific artifacts and technologies that have some origin or association with Europe, having both indigenous and foreign origin. The term has come to be applied by people of European ethnicity to countries whose history is strongly marked by European immigration, colonisation, and influence, such as the continents of the Americas and Australasia, whose current demographic majority is of European ethnicity, and is not restricted to the continent of Europe.Western culture is characterized by a host of artistic, philosophic, literary, and legal themes and traditions; the heritage of Celtic, Germanic, Slavic, Hellenic, Jewish, Latin, and other ethnic and linguistic groups, as well as Christianity, including the Roman Catholic Church and Orthodox Church, which played an important part in the shaping of Western civilization since at least the 4th century. Also contributing to Western thought, in ancient times and then in the Middle Ages and the Renaissance onwards, a tradition of rationalism in various spheres of life, developed by Hellenistic philosophy, Scholasticism, humanism, the Scientific revolution and the Enlightenment. Values of Western culture have, throughout history, been derived from political thought, widespread employment of rational argument favouring freethought, assimilation of human rights, the need for equality, and democracy.Historical records of Western culture in Europe begin with Ancient Greece and Ancient Rome. Western culture continued to develop with Christianisation during the Middle Ages, the reform and modernization triggered by the Renaissance, and with globalization by successive European empires, that spread European ways of life and European educational methods around the world between the 16th and 20th centuries. European culture developed with a complex range of philosophy, medieval scholasticism and mysticism, and Christian and secular humanism. Rational thinking developed through a long age of change and formation, with the experiments of the Enlightenment, and breakthroughs in the sciences. Tendencies that have come to define modern Western societies include the existence of political pluralism, prominent subcultures or countercultures (such as New Age movements), and increasing cultural syncretism resulting from globalization and human migration.