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Study Guide 2010 Exam Three Fall 2024

Exam III for ANTH2010 will be cumulative, requiring review of prior study guides. The exam format will be consistent with previous exams, and students should bring a pristine Scantron. Key topics include gender, race, kinship, and the effects of globalization on intimacy, with specific anthropological theories and figures highlighted for study.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
4 views3 pages

Study Guide 2010 Exam Three Fall 2024

Exam III for ANTH2010 will be cumulative, requiring review of prior study guides. The exam format will be consistent with previous exams, and students should bring a pristine Scantron. Key topics include gender, race, kinship, and the effects of globalization on intimacy, with specific anthropological theories and figures highlighted for study.

Uploaded by

erinseifertmusic
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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ANTH2010

Exam III
Review Sheet
Fall 2024

As discussed in class, and noted on D2L, there will be a cumulative component to Exam III. To prepare
for that aspect of the test please review prior study guides.

The exam will follow the same format as the previous exams. Be sure to have a (pristine) Scantron with
you for the test.

The exam is next Wednesday. We do not have an exam during “Exam Week”.

Look over the previous study guides as there will be a cumulative aspect to the exam.

Best of luck with your studies.

11: Gender, Sex, and Sexuality

Social position and Subject position


Egocentric
Sociocentric
Specific and Diffuse cultures
Emily Martin
Scientific/Medical Discourse (and gender)
Body as factory
Gender and nature
Gender and binary oppositions
Identity and naming practices
Gender as learned through different institutions
Douglas Foley
Powder Puff Football
Margaret Mead:
Arapesh
Mundugumor
Tchambuli
Lahu – why are they significant
Shanshan Du (anthropologist who studied the Lahu)
Two chopsticks
Gender roles, stereotypes, stratification
Berdache
Nadle
Number of Gender Categories
Rites of Passage
The Maasai
Pulling Train
Peggy Sanday
Race, Ethnicity, and Class:
Segmentation of society
Stratification, hierarchy
Gini coefficient
How social hierarchies vary
Mobility and class and caste
Race as a social construction not a biological fact
Race as culturally/discursively constructed specific to particular times and spaces
Stuart Hall
Race as a floating signifier
Emergence of Race in US context, in a Brazilian context
Giraldus Cambrensis – Irish “race”
Notions of “freedom” and “equality” in relation to racial domination
Robert Redfield
Science of Race (history of) in relation to:
Linnaeus
Samuel Morton
Paul Broca
Franz Boas
Stephen Jay Gould
Sparks and Jantz
Russell Bernard
Ellis Island
Round Heads/Long Heads
Race as immutable
Cranial morphological plasticity
Sexual dimorphism
Race and Intelligence
Allen Hanson
Hypodescent
“Race” as fluid versus “race” as fixed
Moving “up” in race (Brazil case study)
Faye Harrison
Peter Wade
John Burdick
Significance of Mestizaje, Blanqueamiento, Indigenismo
Race in the context of religion, and in relation to gender in Brazil (Catholic, Pentecostal, and Anastacia churches)

Frohlick: Fluid Exchanges: The Negotiation of Intimacy between Tourist Women and local Men

What does Frohlick mean by “fluidity”? Is there a model of globalization that roughly corresponds to Frohlick’s
use of the term? Appadurai – global flows.

What sorts of power do the tourists wield in their encounters with Caribbean men? Do the men have any
sources of power in the relationships? How do notions of “romance” and “masculinity” work in relation to the
power of the “sex workers”?

Be familiar with the term cosmopolitan

2
Consider the idea of authenticity in this article in relation to the concept of “nature”. What are the women
looking for? How does this affect the way they perceive the men? How are culture and nature intertwined in the
words of Frohlick’s informants?

Is there a possibility that the tourists are affecting the “subjective identities” of the men they encounter? What is
“double consciousness”?

What is “dark tourism”?

Kinship, Marriage and Family

There are a number of terms you will need to be able to define from this chapter, also be prepared to answer
questions that require the use of a kinship chart (supplied with the exam):
Fictive kinship
Marriage
Descent
Bilateral descent
Unilineal descent
Patrilineal descent
Temporal depth
Matrilineal descent
Cross cousins
Parallel cousins
Kin terms (cousin, Ina, Iuta)
Kin types (MBS, FZD)
Incest taboo
Exogamy
Endogamy
Lineal, collateral, and affinal relatives
Matrilocality, Patrilocality, Neolocality
Clans and lineages
Primary ordering pairs:
Father-son
Brother-sister
Husband-wife
Polygamy
Polygyny
Polyandry
Family of orientation
Family of procreation
Nuclear family
Extended family
Brideservice and Bridewealth (know the difference)
Dowry
Trobriand Islanders
Patrilineage and Matrilineage
Traditional Rural China: Major happiness, Small happiness

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