Key Terms - Cengage Learning
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Transcript Key Terms - Cengage Learning
Chapter 1, Anthropology and
Human Diversity
Key Terms
Anthropology
The comparative study of human societies and
cultures.
Holistic approach
In anthropology, an approach that considers
cultures, history, language and biology
essential to a complete understanding of
human society.
Cultural Anthropology
Study of human behavior that is learned rather
than genetically transmitted, and that is typical
of groups of people.
Society
The set of social relationships among people
within a given geographical area, including
their status and roles.
Culture
The learned behaviors and symbols that allow
people to live in groups. Primary means by
which humans adapt to their environments.
The way of life characteristic of a human
society.
Historical ethnography
Description of the cultural past based on
written records, interviews and archaeology.
Anthropological linguistics
A branch of linguistics concerned with
understanding language and its relation to
culture.
Archaeology
Focuses on the reconstruction of past cultures
based on their material remains.
Prehistoric
Societies for which we have no usable written
records.
Artifact
A material remain of a past culture.
Urban archaeology
Archaeological investigation of current-day
cities.
Cultural resource management
Protection and management of archeological,
archival, and architectural resources.
Biological Anthropology
The study of humankind from a biological
perspective.
Paleoanthropology
Concerned with tracing the evolution of
humankind in the fossil record.
Human Variation
Concerned with mapping and explaining
physical differences among modern human
groups.
Primate
A member of a biological order of mammals
that includes human beings, apes, monkeys
and prosimians.
Applied Anthropology
The application of anthropology to the solution
of human problems.
Forensic Anthropology
Study and identification of skeletized or badly
decomposed human remains.
Ethnocentrism
The notion that one’s own culture is more
beautiful, rational, and nearer to perfection
than any other.
Racism
The belief that some humans are superior
because of inherited characteristics.
Biopsychological Equality
The fact that all human groups have the same
biological and mental capabilities.
Racism
The belief that some human populations are
superior to others because of inherited,
genetically transmitted characteristics.
Racialism
Ideology that claims there are biologically fixed
races with different moral, intellectual, and
physical characteristics that determine
individual aptitudes and that such races can be
ranked on a single hierarchy.
Cultural Relativism
Understanding values and customs in terms of
the culture of which they are a part.
Emic perspective
Examining society using concepts,
categories, and distinctions that are
meaningful to members of that culture.
Etic perspective
Examining society using concepts,
categories, and rules derived from science;
an outsider’s perspective which produces
analyses that members of the society being
studies may not find meaningful.