CULTURAL ANTHROPOLOGY
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Transcript CULTURAL ANTHROPOLOGY
CULTURAL ANTHROPOLOGY
THEORY
Anthropology & Theory
As anthropologists began to accumulate data on
different cultures during the mid-nineteenth
century, they needed to be able to explain the
cultural differences and similarities they found
The desire to account for the vast cultural variation
that had been observed gave rise to anthropological
theory.
Anthropology & Theory
Anthropological theories attempt to answer
questions such as “Why do people behave as they
do?” and “How do we account for human diversity”?
evolutionism
In an attempt to account for
the diversity of human
cultures, the first
anthropologists, writing
during the last half of the 19th
century suggested the theory
of cultural evolutionism.
evolutionism
All societies pass through a series of distinct
evolutionary stages. We find differences in
contemporary cultures because they are at different
evolutionary stages of development.
evolutionism
Edward Tylor
Lewis Henry Morgan
Evolutionism
Euro-American cultures were at
the top of the evolutionary ladder
and ‘less-developed’ cultures on
the lower rungs.
The evolutionary process was
thought to progress from simpler
(lower) forms to increasingly more
complex (higher) forms of
culture.
Evolutionism: Lewis Henry Morgan
*Hired to represent the Iroquois in a land
grant dispute
>began a study of the Seneca culminating in
the book “Systems of Consanguinity and
Affinity”(1871)
>wrote “Ancient Society” (1877) and
developed a system of classifying cultures to
determine their evolutionary niche
Lewis Henry Morgan
Morgan used the categories , savagery, barbarism
and civilization according to the presence or absence
of certain technological features.
1. Lower savagery-from earliest forms of humanity
subsisting on fruits and nuts
2. Middle savagery-began with the discovery of
fishing technology and the use of fire
3. Upper savagery-began with invention of bow and
arrow
Lewis Henry Morgan
4. Lower barbarism-began with the advent of pottery
making
5. Middle barbarism-began with the domestication of
plants and animals in the Old World and irrigation
cultivation in the New World
6. Upper barbarism-began with the smelting of iron
and use of iron tools
7. Civilization-began with the invention of the
phonetic alphabet and writing.
Criticisms of Evolutionism
Ethnocentrism
Armchair speculators
*Both Morgan and Tylor were trying to
establish secular evolutionary rationales
rather than relying on the supernatural
Diffusionism
During the late 19th and early 20th centuries,
diffusionists addressed the question of cultural
differences in the world by determining that humans
were essentially uninventive
Certain cultural features developed in one or several
parts of the world and then spread, through the
process of diffusion, to other cultures.
diffusionists
All societies change as a result of
cultural borrowing from one another
A deductive approach is used, with
the general theory of diffusion being
applied to explain specific cases of
cultural diversity
Diffusionism overemphasized the
essentially valid idea of diffusion
American Historicism
A reaction to the deductive
approach and headed by Franz
Boas, this school of anthropological
thought was prominent in the first
part of the 20th century and insisted
upon the collection of ethnographic
data through direct fieldwork prior
to making cross-cultural
generalizations
American Historicism
Ethnographic facts must precede the development of
cultural theories (induction)
Any culture is partially composed of traits diffused
from other cultures
Direct fieldwork is absolutely essential
Each culture is, to some degree unique
Ethnographers should try to get the view of those
being studied (emic) not their own view (etic)
Functionalism
Theory of social stratification holding that social
stratification exists because it contributes to the
overall well-being of a society
No matter how bizarre a cultural tem might at first
appear, it had a meaning and performed some useful
function the well-being of the individual or the
society; the job of the researcher is to become
sufficiently immersed in the culture and language to
be able to identify these functions
Functionalism-Bronislaw Malinowski
Like Boas, Malinowski was a strong
advocate of fieldwork, but he had no
interest in asking how a cultural item got
to be the way it is. Focused on how
contemporary cultures operated or
functioned
Ex: the kula among the Trobriand
Islanders
Funtionalism-Alfred Reginald Radcliffe-Brown
Like Malinowski, Radcliffe-Brown held that the various
aspects of a society should be studied in terms of the
functions they perform.
Whereas Malinowski viewed functions mostly as meeting
the needs of the individual, Radcliffe-Brown saw them in
terms of contributions to the well-being of the society
A.R. Radcliffe-Brown
Because of the emphasis on
social functions rather than
individual functions,
Radcliffe-Brown’s theory
has taken the name
STRUCTURAL
FUNCTIONALISM
functionalism
The functionalist approach is based on two
fundamental principles:
Universal Functions-every part of a culture has a
function
2. Functional Unity-a culture is an integrated whole
composed of a number of interrelated parts; a
change in one part of the culture is likely to
produce change in other parts
1.
Psychological Anthropology
Looks at the relationships among
cultures and such psychological
phenomena as personality,
cognition and emotions
As early as the 1920s American
Anthropologists became interested
in the relationship between culture
and the individual
Psychological Anthropology
Some of Boas’s students began asking questions
about what role personality played in human
behavior, should personality be viewed as a part of
the cultural system or if personality variables are
part of culture, how are they causally related to the
rest of the system
Edward Sapir
Individuals learn their cultural
patterns unconsciously in the
same way that they learn
language
Culture can be found within the
interaction of individuals
Margaret Mead
Early interest in adolescence in the
U.S.
Coming of age in Samoa (1928)
Research on Gender
*Sex and Temperament in Three
Primitive Societies (1935)
Psychological Anthropology
Anthropologists need to explore the relationships
between psychological and cultural variables
Personality is largely the result of cultural learning
Universal temperaments associated with males and
females do not exist
Neoevolutionism
School of thought that attempted to refine the earlier
evolutionary theories of Tylor and Morgan
Boas and others were extremely critical of 19th
century evolutionists, in part because they made
sweeping generalizations based on inadequate data.
Yet no one was able to demonstrate that cultures do
not develop or evolve in certain ways over time
Leslie White
Resurrected the theories of the
evolutionists
Felt their major shortcoming was an
absence of data
“Culture evolves as the amount of energy
harnessed per capita per year increases
or as the efficiency of the means of
putting energy to work is increased”
*C=E x T
Julian Steward
More interested in developing
propositions about specific
cultures or groups of cultures
*unilinear evolution-an attempt to
place particular cultures into
specific evolutionary phases
Julian Steward
*multilinear evolution-suggestion that specific cultures
can evolve independently of all others even if they
follow the same evolutionary process
*cultural ecology-assumption that people who reside
in similar environments are likely to develop similar
technologies, social structures, and political
institutions
Neoevolutionism
Cultures evolve in direct proportion to their capacity
to harness energy
Culture is shaped by environmental conditions
Through culture, human populations continuously
adapt to technical-environmental conditions
Because technological and environmental factors
shape culture, individual factors are de-emphasized
French Structuralism
Theoretical orientation holding that cultures are the
product of unconscious processes of the human mind
Claude Levi-Strauss
French Structuralism
Human cultures are shaped by certain
preprogrammed codes of the human
mind
Theory focuses on the underlying
principles that generate behavior rather
than the observable empirical behavior
itself
Emphasizes repetitive structures rather
than sociocultural change
French Structuralism
Rather than examining attitudes,
values and beliefs, structuralists
concentrate on what happens at
the unconscious level
The human mind categorizes
phenomena in terms of binary
oppositions.
Ethnoscience
Theoretical school popular in the 1950s and 60s that
tries to understand a culture from the point of view
of the people being studied
Ethnoscience
Attempts to make ethnographic description more
accurate and replicable
Describes a culture by using the categories of the
people under study rather than by imposing
categories from the ethnographers culture
Because it is time-consuming, ethnoscience has been
confined to describing very small segments of a
culture
Difficult to compare data collected by ethnoscientists
Feminist Anthropology
Seeks to describe and
explain cultural life from
the perspective of women
Feminist Anthropology
All aspects of culture have a gender dimension that
must be considered in any balanced ethnographic
description
Theory represents a long overdue corrective to male
bias in traditional ethnographies
More subjective and collaborative than objective and
scientific
Largely critical of a value-free orientation
Cultural Materialism
Cultural systems are most
influenced by such material
things as natural resources and
technology
*Marvin Harris
Cultural Materialism
Material conditions determine human thoughts and
behavior
Theorists assume the viewpoint of the
anthropologist, not the native informant
Anthropology is seen as scientific, empirical and
capable of generating causal explanations
De-emphasizes the role of ideas and values in
determining the conditions of social life
Postmodernism
Human behavior stems from the way
people perceive and classify the world
around them
Interpretive Anthropology: the critical
aspects of cultural systems are subjective
factors such as values, ideas and
worldviews
*Clifford Geertz
Postmodernism
Calls on anthropologists to switch from cultural
generalization and laws to description, interpretation
and the search for meaning
Ethnographies should be written from several voicesthat of the anthropologist along with those of the
people under analysis
Involves a return to cultural relativism