Anthropology
Anthropology
Anthropology
A recent discipline given its present shape during the 20thc, but it
has important indications in the historiography, geography, travel
writing, philosophy and jurisprudence of earlier times.
Anthropology as a scientific discipline, some would trace its roots
back to the European Enlightenment, during the 18 century;
Others would claim that anthropology did not arise as a science until
the 1850s;
yet others would argue that anthropological research in its present-
day sense only commenced after the First World War.
Anthropology, considered as the science of humanity, originated in
“Western” countries: France, Great Britain, the USA and, Germany.
The present academic anthropology has its roots in the works and ideas of
the Great Ancient and Medieval Greek, Roman, and Hebrew
philosophers and social thinkers.
These people were interested in the nature, origin and destiny of man, and
the morality and ethics of human relationships.
In any language, certain cultural aspects that are emphasized (such as types
of snow among the Inuit, cows among the pastoral Maasai, or automobiles in
U.S. culture) are reflected in the vocabulary.
Moreover, cultural linguists explore how different linguistic categories can
affect how people categorize their experiences, how they think, and how
they perceive the world around them.
Historical linguistics:
Deals with the emergence of language in general and how specific languages
have diverged over time.
It focuses on the comparison and classifications of different languages to
differentiate the historical links between them.
• Socio-linguistics:
Sociolinguistics examines how the use of language defines
social groups.
It investigates linguistic variation within a given language.
No language is a homogeneous system in which everyone
speaks just like everyone else.
One reason for variation is geography, as in regional dialects
and accents.
Linguistic variation also is expressed in the bilingualism of
ethnic groups.
2.3. Socio-Cultural Anthropology
This branch of anthropology is called differently in different
parts of the world.
It is called cultural anthropology in North American universities;
ethnology in countries such as Germany; and social anthropology
in other countries including the United Kingdom and Ethiopia.
The name socio-cultural anthropology, however, appears to be
more commonly used to refer to this largest sub-field of
anthropology.
Socio-cultural anthropology studies contemporary societies and
cultures throughout the world. In the past, however, mainly
social anthropologists from the Western world conducted
ethnographic fieldworks in non-Western societies in Africa, Asia,
Latin America and Oceania.
Society is the group of people who have similar ways of life,
but culture is a way of life of a group of people.
Society and culture are two sides of the same coin.
Sociocultural anthropology describes, analyzes, interprets, and
explains social, cultural and material life of contemporary
human societies.
It studies the social (human relations), symbolic or nonmaterial
(religious, language, and any other symbols) and material (all
man-made objects) lives of living peoples.
Socio-cultural anthropologists engage in two aspects of study:
Ethnography (based on field work) and Ethnology (based on cross-
cultural comparison).
Ethnography provides a comprehensive account of a particular
community, society, or culture.
It describes the features of specific cultures in as much detail as
possible including local behavior, beliefs, customs, social life,
economic activities, politics, and religion.
These detailed descriptions (ethnographies) are the result of
extensive field studies (usually a year or two, in duration) in which
the anthropologist observes, talks to, and lives with the people he or
she studies.
During ethnographic fieldwork, the anthropologist (ethnographer)
gathers data that he or she organizes, describes, analyzes, and
interprets to build and present that account, which may be in the
form of a book, article, or film.
Ethnology is the comparative study of contemporary cultures and
societies, wherever they may be found.
It examines, interprets, analyzes, and compares the results of
ethnographic data gathered in different societies.
It uses such data to compare and contrast and to make generalizations
about society and culture.
In other words, Ethnologists seek to understand both why people today
and in the recent past differ in terms of ideas and behavior patterns and
what all cultures in the world have in common with one another.
Looking beyond the particular to the more general, ethnologists attempt
to identify and explain cultural differences and similarities, to test
hypotheses, and to build theory to enhance our understanding of how
social and cultural systems work.
Indeed, the primary objective of ethnology is to uncover general
cultural principles, the ―rules‖ that govern human behavior.
Socio-cultural anthropology uses ethnographical and ethnological
approaches to answer all sort of questions related to culture and human
societies.
To properly address emerging questions related to culture and societies, it
has been sub-divided into many other specialized fields as:
1. Anthropology of Art,
2. Medical Anthropology,
3. Urban Anthropology,
4. Economic Anthropology,
5. Political Anthropology,
6. Development Anthropology,
7. Anthropology of Religion,
8. Demographic Anthropology,
9. Ecological Anthropology,
10. Psychological Anthropology,
11. Ethnomusicology, etc.
All of them are considered to be the applied areas of anthropology.
2.4. Physical/Biological Anthropology
5. Culture is shared:
Culture in the anthropological and sociological sense, is something
shared.
It is not something that an individual alone can posses.
For a thing, idea, or behavior pattern to qualify as being ―cultural it
must have a shared meaning by at least two people within a society.
In order for a society to operate effectively, the guidelines must be
shared by its members.
Without shared culture members of a society would be unable to
communicate and cooperate hence confusion and disorder world result.
For instance:
Language, customs, traditions, beliefs, ideas, values, morals etc are all
shared by people of a group or society.
Therefore, culture is something adopted, used, believed, practiced or
possessed by more than one person.
It depends upon group life for its existence.
6. Culture is symbolic
Symbolic thought is unique and crucial to humans and to culture. Symbolic
thought is the human ability to give a thing or event an arbitrary meaning and
grasp and appreciate that meaning Symbols are the central components of culture.
Symbols refer to anything to which people attach meaning and which they use to
communicate with others.
More specifically, symbols are words, objects, gestures, sounds or images that
represent something else rather than themselves.
Symbolic thought is unique and crucial to humans and to culture. It is the human
ability to give a thing or event an arbitrary meaning and grasp and appreciate that
meaning.
There is no obvious natural or necessary connection between a symbol and what it
symbolizes.
Culture thus works in the symbolic domain emphasizing meaning, rather than the
technical/practical rational side of human behavior.
All actions have symbolic content as well as being action in and of themselves.
Things, actions, behaviors, etc, always stand for something else than merely, the
thing itself.
•
7. Culture seizes nature
Culture imposes itself on nature. It suppresses the natural, biological
instincts in us and expresses it in particular ways.
For example, we as biological beings feel the desire for food; but what
type of food to eat, how many times per day to eat, with whom to eat,
how much to eat, how fast or slow to eat, etc, are all determined by the
cultural values and norms of a particular group of people.
Or, we feel the desire to urinate, but one cannot do that anytime and
anywhere, unless one is an animal, an immature child or a mentally sick
person.
8. Culture is patterned
Cultures are not haphazard collection of customs and beliefs, but are
integrated, patterned systems the parts are interrelated
Culture is an integrated whole, that is the parts of culture are
interrelated to one another.
No one single cultural trait has its meaning outside of its integrated
context.
Characteristic features of culture cont…
Marriage of a man with two or more sisters at a time is called sororal polygyny.
When the co-wives are not sisters, the marriage is termed as
non-sororal polygyny.
Advantages and Disadvantages of Polygamous
marriage
Having two/more wives is often seen as a sign of
prestige.
Having multiple wives means wealth, power, and status
both for the polygnous husband, wives and children.
It produces more children, who are considered valuable
for future economic and political assets.
Economic advantage: It encourages to work hard (more
cows, goats..) for more wives
The Drawbacks of Polygyny: Jealousy among the co-
wives who frequently compete for the husband‘s
attention.
Economic Consideration of Marriage
Most societies view as a binding contract between at least the
husband and wife and, in many cases, between their respective
families as well.
Such a contract includes the transfer of certain rights between
the parties involved: rights of sexual access, legal rights to
children, and rights of the spouses to each other‘s economic
goods and services.
Often the transfer of rights is accompanied by the transfer of
some type of economic consideration.
These transactions, which may take place either before or after
the marriage can be divided into three categories:
1) Bride Price/wealth,
2) Bride Service and
3) Dowry
Bride Price: It is also known as bride wealth, is the compensation
given upon marriage by the family of the groom to the family of the
bride.
According to Murdock, in Africa it was estimated that 82% of the
societies require the payment of bride price/wealth.
Anthropologists identified a number of important functions that the
institutions of bride price/wealth performed for the well-being of the
society.
For example, bride price/wealth has been seen:
As security or insurance for the good treatment of the wife:
As mechanism to stabilize marriage by reducing the possibility of
divorce:
As a form of compensation to the bride‘s lineage for the loss of her
economic potential and childbearing capacity: and
As a symbol of the union between two large groups of kin.
Bride Service: When the groom works for his wife‘s family, this
is known as bride service.
It may be recalled that in the Old Testament, Jacob labored for
seven years in order to marry Leah, and then another seven years
to marry Rachel; Leah‘s younger sister, thus performed fourteen
years of bride service for his father-in-law.
Bride service was also practiced by the Yanomamo, a people
living in the low- lands of Venezuela.
During this time, the groom lives with the bride‘s parents and
hunts for them.
Dowry: A dowry involves a transfer of goods or money in the
opposite direction, from the bride's family to the groom‘s family.
Post-Marital Residence
Where the newly married couple lives after the marriage ritual is
governed by cultural rules, which are referred to as post-marital
residence rule.
Patrilocal Residence: the married couple lives with or near the
relatives of the husband‘s father.
Matrilocal Residence: the married couple lives with or near
the relatives of the wife.
Avunculocal Residence: The married couple lives with or near
the husband‘s mother‘s brother.
Ambilocal/Bilocal Residence: The married couple has a choice
of living with relatives of the wife or relatives of the husband
Neolocal Residence: The Married couple forms an independent
place of residence away from the relatives of either spouse.
Family
Family is the basis of human society.
It is the most important primary group in society.
The family, as an institution, is universal.
It is the most permanent and most pervasive of all social
institutions.
The interpersonal relationships within the family make the
family an endurable social unit.
Cultural anthropologists have identified two fundamentally
different types of family structure
1. Nuclear family and
2. Extended family.
The Nuclear Family: Consisting of husband and wife and their children,
the nuclear family is a two-generation family formed around the conjugal
or marital union.
Even though the unclear family, to some degree, is part of a larger family
structure, it remains relatively autonomous and independent unit.
That is, the everyday needs of economic support, child care, and social
interaction are met within the nuclear family itself rather than by a wider
set of relatives.
In those societies based on the nuclear family, it is customary for married
couple to live apart from either set of parents (neolocal residence), nor is
there any particular obligation or expectation for the married couple to
care for their aging parents in their own homes.
Generally, parents are not actively involved in mate selection for their
children, in no way legitimize the marriages of their children, and have
no control over whether or not their children remain married.
The Extended Family In societies based on extended families,
blood ties are more important than ties of marriage.
Extended families consist of two or more families that are
linked by blood ties.
Most commonly, this takes the form of a married couple living
with one or more of their married children in a single
household or homestead and under the authority of a family
head.
In the case of a patrilineal extended family, the young couple
takes up residence in the homestead of the husband‘s father,
and the husband continues to work for his father, who also runs
the household.
Moreover, most of the personal property in the household is
not owned by the newlyweds, but is controlled by the
husbands‘ father.
It is important to point out that in extended family systems,
marriage is viewed more as bringing a daughter into the family
than acquiring a wife.
In other words, a man‘s obligations of obedience to his father
and loyalty to his brothers are far more important than his
relationship to his wife.
When a woman marries into an extended family, she most often
comes under the control of her mother-in-law, who allocates
chores and supervises her domestic activities.
As geographical mobility are more likely associated with
nuclear family than with extended family, there is a rough
correlation found between extended family system and an
agricultural way of life.
Functions of Marriage and Family
Family performs certain specific functions which can be
summarized as follows:
1. Biological Function: The institution of marriage and family
serves biological (sexual and reproductive) function.
The institution of marriage regulates and socially validates long
term, sexual relations between males and females.
Thus, husband-wife relationship come into existence and become a
socially approved means to control sexual relation and a socially
approved basis of the family.
Sexual cohabitation between spouses automatically leads to the
birth of off-springs.
The task of perpetuating the population of a society is an important
function of a family.
Society reproduces itself through family.
2. Economic Function: Marriage brings economic co-operation
between men and women and ensures survival of individuals in a
society.
With the birth of off-springs, the division of labor based on sex
and generation come into play.
In small scale societies, family is a self-contained economic
unit of production, consumption and distribution.
3. Social Function: Marriage is based on the desire to perpetuate
one‘s family line.
In marriage, one adds not only a spouse but most of the spouse‘s
relatives to one‘s own group of kin.
This means the institution of marriage brings with it the creation
and perpetuation of the family, the form of person to person
relations and linking one‘s kin group to another kin group.
4. Educational and Socialization Function: The burden
of socialization (via processes of enculturation and
education) of new born infants fall primarily upon the
family.
In addition, children learn an immense amount of
knowledge, culture, values prescribed by society,
before they assume their place as adult members of a
society.
The task of educating and acculturating children is
distributed among parents.
Moreover, family behaves as an effective agent in the
transmission of social heritage.
Kinship
A significant concept in Anthropology
kinship is vitally important, because kinship and family constitute the focal points in
anthropological studies.
Kinship is the method of reckoning relationship
In any society every adult individual belongs to two different nuclear families.
The family in which he was born and reared is called „family of orientation‘. The
other family to which he establishes relation through marriage is called „family of
procreation‟.
A kinship system is neither a social group nor does it correspond to organized
aggregation of individuals.
It is a structured system of relationships where individuals are bound together by
complex interlocking and ramifying ties.
The relationship based on blood ties is called “consanguineous kinship, and the
relatives of this kind are called ‗consanguineous kin‘.
The desire for reproduction gives rise to another kind of binding relationship. ―This
kind of bond, which arises out of a socially or legally defined marital relationship, is
called affinal relationship‖, and the relatives so related are called „affinal kin‟.
Descent
Descent refers to the social recognition of the biological
relationship that exists between the individuals.
The rule of descent refers to a set of principles by which an
individual traces his descent.
In almost all societies kinship connections are very significant.
An individual always possesses certain obligations towards his
kinsmen and he also expects the same from his kinsmen.
Succession and inheritance are related to this rule of descent.
There are three important rules of descent:
1. Patrilineal descent When descent is traced solely through the
male line, it is called patrilineal descent.
A man‘s sons and daughters all belong to the same descent group
by birth, but it is only the sons who continue the affiliation.
Succession and inheritance pass through the male line..
2. Matrilineal descent When the descent is traced solely through
the female line.
It is called matrilineal descent.
At birth, children of both sexes belong to mother‘s descent
group, but later only females acquire the succession and
inheritance.
Therefore, daughters carry the tradition, generation after
generation.
3. Cognatic Descent In some societies individuals are free to show
their genealogical links either through men or women.
Some people of such a society are therefore connected with the
kin-group of father and others with the kin group of mothers.
There is no fixed rule to trace the succession and inheritance; any
combination of lineal link is possible in such societies
Culture areas and culture contact
Culture areas refers to a cluster of related cultures occupying a
certain geographical region.
In anthropology the concept of culture area has been used
beginning from the 1920s where Afred Kroeber and his
contemporaries were interested in examining the concentration
of cultural trains in a given geographic area.
In the context of Ethiopia, we may come up with different
culture are in relation to subsistence.
These are:
1. Plough culture,
2. Enset culture area, and
3. Pastoral societies‘ culture area.
A. Plough culture area: Plough culture area represents those parts
of the country where agriculture is predominantly the means by
which subsistence is eked out.
Most of highland and central parts of the country serves as the
backbone of the economy is considered a plough culture.
The area often called plough culture has been a subject of
anthropological inquires over the past seven decades starting
from the 1950s.
Some of the ethnographers who studied the area that we call
plough culture are
Donald Levine,
Allen Hobben,
Fredrick Gamst and
Jack Bauer.
B. Enset culture area
Enset culture area, on the other hand, covers a vast region in the
southern part of country.
Enset cultivating regions of the present day SNNPRS such as the
Guraghe, Sidama and Gedeo areas constitute enset culture area.
In this region, enset serves as a staple diet to the people who
make use the plant in a wide variety of forms for a living.
C. Pastoral culture area
Pastoral culture area is found in the low land areas covering a
large section of the Afar in the northwest, Somali in the southeast
and Borena of southern of Ethiopia.
As opposed to the above the cases, inhabitants of the pastoral
culture area rely significantly on their herds and cattle for a
living.
Mobility of people and herds is a major characteristic feature of
the people occupying the pastoral culture area.
Unit Four: Marginalized, Minorities, and Vulnerable Groups
• Potters produce pottery articles essential for food processing and serving
and fetching water.
Cont.…
• Marginalization of despised occupational groups such as crafts-worker
is manifested in many ways in different parts of Ethiopia.
Type of Manifestations of marginalization
marginalization
Spatial live on the outskirts of villages
marginalization segregated at market places (outskirts of markets)
Expected to give way for others and walk on the lower side of the road.
Economic Excluded from certain economic activities including production and
marginalization exchanges.
They have a limited access to land and land ownership.
Social Excluded from intermarriage, membership of associations such as iddirs,
marginalization they do not share burial places with others;
When they are allowed to participate in social events, they must sit on
the floor separately-sometimes outside the house or near the door.
Cultural Labeled as impure and polluting; they are accused of eating animals that
marginalization have died without being slaughtered;
considered unreliable, lacking morality, respect and shame.
Older men and women have been respected across Ethiopian cultures.
They play crucial role in protection of tradition, culture, and history, mentoring younger people,
resolving disputes, and restoring peace across Ethiopian cultures.
Rural-urban migration, changes in values and life style, education and new employment opportunities
lead to so many changes.
Care and support for older men and women tend to decline as younger people migrate to urban areas
and exposed to economic pressure and new life styles.
Older people are facing various problems as a result of modernization, globalization, and
urbanization.
Older people are exposed to social exclusion because of their lower social and economic status.
In most cases, older people are excluded from social, cultural, political and economic interactions in
their communities.
Older persons are marginalized because they are considered as social burden rather than social assets.
4.5. Religious and ethnic minorities
There are several examples of marginalization and discrimination
targeting religious and ethnic minorities in the world. examples
• The Jewish people suffered from discrimination and persecution in
different parts of the world.
• Muslim Rohingyas are among the most marginalized and
persecuted people in the world. In recent years, more than half-a-
million Rohingyas fled from their homes in Nyanmar to
neighboring countries such as Bangladesh.
• As people living in refugee camps, the Rohingyas are vulnerable to
problems such as malnutrition and physical and sexual abuse.
4.6. Human right approaches and inclusiveness: Anthropological
perspectives
• All forms of marginalization and discrimination against vulnerable
and minority groups contradict the principles of human rights.
• People with disabilities have the right to inclusive services and
equal opportunities.
• The human rights of women and girls include right to be free from
harmful traditional practices
Explore the human rights treaties
The Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC) is a human rights treaty
approved by the United Nations in 1989. The Convention has 41 articles
focusing on the survival rights, development rights, protection rights and
participation rights of the child.
Convention for the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women
(CEDAW) is a human rights treaty endorsed by the United Nations General
Assembly in 1979.
UNIT FIVE:
INTER-ETHNIC RELATIONS, IDENTITY AND MULTICULTURALISM
• Barth focused not upon the cultural characteristics of ethnic groups but
upon relationships of cultural differentiation, and specifically upon contact
between collectivities thus differentiated, 'us' and 'them' (Eriksen, 2002).
• we can assume no simple one-to-one relationship between ethnic units and
cultural similarities and differences.
• The features that are taken into account are not the sum of 'objective'
differences, but only those which the actors themselves regard as
significant…not only do ecological variations mark and exaggerate
differences; some cultural features are used by the actors as signals and
emblems of differences, others are ignored, and in some relationships
radical differences are played down and denied (Barth, 1969: 14).
Cont.…
• The cultural contents of ethnic dichotomies would seem
analytically to be of two orders:
• (i) overt signals or signs - the diacritical features that people look
for and exhibit to show identity, often such features as dress,
language, house-form, or general style of life
• (ii) basic value orientations: the standards of morality and
excellence by which performance is judged.
• Since belonging to an ethnic category implies being a certain kind
of person, having that basic identity, it also implies a claim to be
judged, and to judge oneself, by those standards that are relevant to
that identity.
Cont.…
• The Gadaa system is an age grading institution of the Oromo that has
a complex system of administration, law making and dispute
settlement‘ (Pankhurst and Getachew 2008).
• The Gadaa is a highly celebrated institution of governance and
dispute settlement among the Oromo people. Gadaa is widely
mentioned as an egalitarian (democratic) system of governance.
• In the Gadaa system, political power is transferred from one
generation set (Luuba) to another every eight years.
• Gaada officials such as the Abba Gaada and Abba Seera (father of
law) serve for eight years and leave their position to the new
generation of Gadaa officials.
Cont.…
• The Gaada system involves a continuous process of law making and revision.
The law making process has rooms for wider participation of the people.
• Gumi gaayo, a law making assembly of the Borana Oromo, is a good example.
Gumi gaayo is held every eight years to revising, adapting, making and
publicizing the customary law (seera) and custom (aadaa) of the Oromo.
• The Waliso Oromo have a law making assembly known as yaa‟iiharaa, an
equivalent of gumigaayo, held every eight years.
• The Gaada is an indigenous system of governance, conflict resolution, and
peacemaking.
• The indigenous system of governance among the Oromo also include
institutions of conflict resolution such as the Jaarsa Biyyaa (literally: elders of
the soil/land) institution.
The Gedeo Baalle
• When disputes are not settled at the village level, cases can be referred to
first to the Hulla Hayyicha and finally to the Abba Gada.
• In general, the Gedeo system of governance has the following major
institutions: the ya‟a (general assembly), the Seera (customary law), the
Abba Gada, and council of elders (Getachew, 2014).
Dere Woga of the Gamo
• The Gamo are among Omotic peoples of southern Ethiopia. Unlike their
neighboring people such as Wolayta and Dawro, the Gamo did not have a
centralized political system.
• The Gamo people were organized into several local administrations locally
known as deres.
• According to anthropological findings, most of deres were governed by a ka‟o
(king) and halaqa (elected leader).
• The Gamo indigenous system of governance embraces the dere woga
(customary law) and the dubusha (assemblies/ customary court).
• The highest body of the indigenous governance is the dere dubusha, a general
assembly that is responsible to make and revise customary laws, resolve major
disputes that cannot be solved at the lower levels.
Intra-ethnic conflict resolution institutions
• Conflicts may arise between individuals, groups and communities within the
same ethnic group or different ethnic background.
• Peoples across Ethiopian regions have indigenous institutions and mechanisms
of conflict resolution and peace making.
• These institutions are parts of indigenous systems of governance.
• There are different indigenous institutions of conflict resolution and
peacemaking across regions and cultures in Ethiopia.
• Authors use different terms to discuss these indigenous institutions
(customary, dispute resolution mechanisms; traditional mechanisms of conflict
resolution; grassroots justice systems; and customary justice institutions).
Cont.…
• There are variations and similarities among indigenous institutions of
conflict resolution in Ethiopia.
• Indigenous justice institutions and mechanisms share several common
aspects including the following:
Preference and respect for elders known for their qualities including
experience in dispute resolution; knowledge of customary laws, procedures,
norms and values of the society; impartiality, respect for rules and people; the
ability of listening and speaking politely; honesty and tolerance.
Intra and inter-ethnic conflicts have become common in our country in recent years.
- What do you think are the causes of these conflicts?
- Is it related to the decline of respect for the elderly in recent times?
- Or has the culture of peaceful coexistence deteriorated?
Cont.…
• Most of the elders involved in inter-ethnic conflict resolutions are
bilingual: speaking Tigrigna and Afar (Shimeles and Taddese 2008).
• Ethnographic findings also reveal the existence of inter-ethnic
conflict resolution mechanisms when conflicts arise between Afar,
Issa, Tigrayans and Argobba.
• The mechanisms of inter-ethnic disputes have different names. It is
called Xinto among the Afar, Edible among the Issa, Gereb among
the Tigrayans, and Aboroge among the Amhara (Alula and
Getachew, 2008).
Sidama women have two instruments of power: the Yakka and the Siqqo. The
Yakka is women's association or unity group. The Siqqo is a stick that
symbolizes peace and women honor.
Mobilizing the Yakka and holding the Siqqo, Sidama women stand for their
customary rights. E.g, when a woman is beaten up by her husband or a
pregnant woman is mistreated, if a man prohibits his wife from Yakka
participation, the women group impose a fine on him. The fine could be an ox.
If a woman is ill-treated by her husband, the Yakka leader (known as Qaritte)
mobilizes the Yakka and leads them to the house of the man. The husband
would not have a choice when he is surrounded by the Yakka holding their
Siqqo shouting and singing. If he is found guilty, the man would be forced to
slaughter a sheep and give part of it to the Yakka. Sidama women also use
their Siqqo to make peace between quarrelling parties.
Cont.…
• Oromo women also have a peace stick called Sinqee.