Chapter 4 Enculturation

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Chapter 4 Enculturation

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Title: Chapter 4 Enculturation


1
Chapter 4 Enculturation
Parades around the world Upper left China Bottom
left Nigeria Upper right Germany Bottom left
USA
2
Objectives from last time
  • How is culture ingrained in children?
  • What did the following people contribute to the
    study of culture
  • Sigmund Freud
  • Margaret Mead
  • Ruth Benedict
  • Define cognitive anthropology and structuralism
    as theoretical approaches.
  • Is culture prescriptive, or do people have a
    choice over their behavior?

3
Enculturation and Emotion
  • To what degree does enculturation influence
    emotions?
  • Does happiness, anger, grief vary from society to
    society?
  • Mead and Benedict culture influences emotions
  • Psychological anthropologists biology
    influences emotions
  • Interactionist sadness, anger, happiness,
    surprise are four cross-cultural emotions

4
Mental Illness
  • Is there a universal concept of normal and
    abnormal behavior?
  • Early 20th century psychosis and neurosis were
    universal
  • Benedict criteria of abnormality reflect the
    particular culture
  • Culture-specific disorders
  • Latah, amok, windigo, pibloktoq
  • Biological and cultural variables

5
Limits of Enculturation
  • Enculturation is not completely determinative
  • Different talents
  • Different responses to environmental stimuli
  • Without it, though, people are unable to think,
    behave, and develop emotionally in order to
    function in society.
  • Variation
  • Not all people are enculturated in the same way
  • Norms do not dictate behavior
  • Culture is always changing

6
Chapter 6 Anthropological Theories
Top B. Malinowski, L.H. Morgan, E.B. Tylor, L.
White, C. Geertz Bottom F. Boas, A.R.
Radcliffe-Brown, J. Steward, M. Harris
7
Todays Objectives
  • What are the differences between 19th and 20th
    century anthropological theories?
  • Are any of these theories adequate to explain
    culture, human behavior, or the structure of
    society?

8
19th Century Evolutionism
  • Unilineal Evolution
  • Edward B. Tylor
  • Savagery -gt barbarism -gt civilization
  • Lewis Henry Morgan
  • Kinship theories
  • Whats wrong with this approach?
  • Racist
  • Unclear about biological evolution

E.B. Tylor
L.H. Morgan
9
Diffusionism
  • British Diffusionism
  • Culture originated in Egypt
  • German Diffusionism
  • Culture originated in several spots
  • Diffused in circles
  • Whats wrong with this approach?
  • Racist
  • Assumption of spread of culture

Yellow - Clovis Pink - Mousterian Green -
Oldowon Purple - Acheulean Blue - Bamboo tools
10
Historical Particularism
  • Franz Boas
  • Reaction against unilineal evolutionists
  • Developed ideas of
  • historical particularism
  • cultural relativism
  • Created new research strategies
  • Participant-observation
  • Worked in all four fields of anthropology
  • Trained other anthropologists
  • Margaret Mead and Ruth Benedict
  • Whats wrong with this approach?

Boas demonstrating a Kwakiutl dance
11
Functionalism
  • Structural-Functionalism
  • A.R. Radcliffe-Brown
  • Social institutions serve societys needs
  • Psychological Functionalism
  • Bronislaw Malinowski
  • Society functions to serve the individuals needs
  • Whats wrong with this approach?
  • Why are societies similar/different?
  • Cant explain culture change

A.R. Radcliffe-Brown
Bronislaw Malinowski
12
Functionalism A Model
Culture
The Whole Organs Individuals
Politics
Religion
Marriage
Economy
?
13
Culture-and-Personality School
  • 1930s and 1940s biological determinism
  • Culture-and-personality guided by the idea that
    each culture is characterized by a dominant
    personality type.
  • Example Ruth Benedict and the Plains and Pueblo
    Indians
  • Apollonian and Dionysian
  • Megalomaniacs and paranoids
  • Culture of a group can be examined
  • through individuals

Ruth Benedict
14
20th Century Evolutionism
  • AKA neo-evolutionism
  • Led by Leslie White of U Mich
  • Sociocultural systems evolved in relation to the
    amount of energy captured and used by members of
    society.
  • E.g. agricultural systems
  • Cultural ecology
  • Julian Steward
  • AKA ecological anthropology
  • Focuses on how cultures adapt to environment

Top Leslie White Bottom Julian Steward
15
20th Century Evolutionism
  • Whats good about this approach?
  • Rejected L.H. Morgans and E.B. Tylors
    assumptions
  • Not ethnocentric
  • Not racist
  • Influenced by other developments in science
  • Whats bad about this approach?
  • Only focuses on the environment
  • Culture change only occurs through adaptations

16
Structuralism
  • To investigate the thought processes of the human
    mind in a universal context.
  • Founded by Claude Levi-Strauss in the 1940s
  • Humans classify the world with binary oppositions
    (raw/cooked, hot/cold, nature/culture)
  • Universalist structure of the mind produces
    similar thinking and cognition throughout the
    world
  • Looked at kinship, mythology, cuisine, table
    manners

Claude Levi-Strauss
17
Cultural Materialism
  • Marvin Harris
  • Refined the neo-evolutionist approach of White
    and Steward
  • Key ideas in materialism are
  • Infrastructure technology
  • Structure domestic and political economies
  • Superstructure non-material culture
  • Whats wrong with this approach?
  • Ignores social, political, religious values
  • Technologically deterministic
  • Neglects the idea of symbolism

Marvin Harris
18
Marxist Anthropology
  • Marxs evolutionary scheme of societal
    development
  • Based on L.H. Morgans unilineal evolutionist
    idea
  • Marxist stages tribal, Asiatic, feudal,
    capitalist, socialist, communist
  • Form of materialism
  • Class struggle important to change in society
  • Whats wrong with this approach?
  • Marxs model of societal evolution

Karl Marx
19
Symbolic Anthropology
  • Study of culture through interpretation of the
    meaning of the symbols, values, and beliefs of a
    society.
  • Human behavior cannot be explained by means of
    the scientific method.
  • Goal is to interpret symbols within the
    worldviews of that society.
  • Called an emic approach
  • Reminiscent of Boass particularism and
    relativism
  • Thick description interpreting relationship
    among symbols
  • Whats wrong with this approach?
  • Focuses exclusively on symbols
  • Human behavior explained by meaning of symbols

20
Cognitive Anthropology
  • Study of cognition and cultural meanings to
    discover unconscious classification systems that
    structure human thinking processes.
  • Developed in the 1950s and 1960s.
  • Examples
  • Kinship terminology
  • Colors (Berlin and Kay)
  • black, white, red, green, blue, yellow, brown,
    purple, pink, orange, and grey
  • simple societies will have few color words
    (white/black) evolutionary sequence
  • complex societies will have numerous color
    words (red, green, blue, yellow . . . To colors
    found in a J. Crew catalogue)
  • Bird (Boster) and insect classification

21
Psychoanalytic Anthropology
Sigmund Freud
  • Sigmund Freud (1856-1939)
  • Human behavior reflects innate emotions
  • Id sex and aggression, basic needs
  • Ego conscious personality
  • Superego your conscience
  • Neo-Freudian approaches to anthro
  • Melvin Spiro and the Trobrianders
  • Attempt to study relationship among unconscious
    thoughts, emotions, and motives of humans (id and
    superego).

Trobriand Woman
22
Sociobiology
  • Very recent theory (1970s)
  • Study of the biological basis of social behavior
  • Led to evolutionary psychology
  • Darwinian assumptions
  • Interested in general strategies of behavior
  • Like ethologists for humans

23
Sociobiology - Examples
  • Sexual behavior
  • Humans have to procreate
  • What are the cultural practices and values
    related to sexuality?
  • Can be modified by learning experiences
  • Inclusive fitness
  • Maximization of fitness of species
  • Kin selection favoring your relatives
    (nepotism)
  • Whats wrong with this approach?
  • Idea of innate predispositions (not learning)
  • Presents situations not found in nature

24
Evolutionary Psychology
  • Nature/nurture paradox
  • Draws on ethnography, psychology, and
    evolutionary theory
  • Human mind is not passive, but adapts and reacts
    to culture and environment
  • During the Palaeolithic, mind and culture
    co-evolved
  • Genetically evolved predispositions
  • Intuitive understanding of biology and physics
  • Interest in soap operas and reality TV

Palaeolithic Tools Reality TV
25
Feminist Anthropology
  • Developed in the 1960s and 1970s
  • Reaction to the feminist movement in the U.S.
  • Emphasizes that gender roles are important in
    ethnographic research.
  • Questions assumptions regarding male and female
    behavior based on biological differences.
  • Created general awareness of gender in
    anthropology.
  • Nature/culture opposition ?/??
  • Whats wrong with this approach?
  • From androcentric to gynocentric
  • Some discount biology entirely
  • Only women can research women

26
Postmodernism
  • How do we know what we know?
  • Principles
  • Scientific participant-observer is flawed
  • There is no true objectivity in anthropology
  • Interpretive model does not work
  • Should talk to people themselves
  • Some famous postmodernists
  • Clifford Geertz, James Clifford, George Marcus,
    Kent Flannery, Michael Fischer
  • Whats wrong with this approach?
  • How will we ever know anything?
  • PoMos have exaggerated the past mistakes of
    ethnographers.

Clifford Geertz
27
Materialism versus Culturalism
  • Reflects difference between scientific approach
    and humanistic-interpretive approach.
  • Materialists
  • Focus on technology, environment, biology
  • Includes cultural materialists, Marxists,
    sociobiologists, evolutionary psychologists
  • Culturalists
  • Includes structuralists, psychological
    anthropologists, symbolic and cognitive
    anthropologists, postmodernists
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