Cultural Anthropology Fall 1997
Carol Hayman MWF 10-10:50
ANT 2413-3187 RGC 019
Tentative Syllabus
Unit 1
8/25
8/27
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Chapter 1: The Nature of Anthropology
8/29
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Chapter 2: The Nature of Culture
9/3
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Spradley 2. Eating Christmas in the Kalahari
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23. Culture, Rank and IQ
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35. Using Anthropology
9/5-9/12
9/15
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Spradley 3. Shakespeare in the Bush
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6. Conversation Style: Talking on the Job
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7. The Sapir-Whorf Hypothesis
9/17
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Chapter 5: Growing Up Human
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Spradley 17. Mother's Love
9/19 (Fri.) Review
9/22 (Mon.) Exam 1
Unit 2
10/1 (Wed.) First paper due
9/24-9/26
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Chapter 6: Patterns of Subsistence
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Spradley 9. The Hunters
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10. Cultivating the Tropical Forest
9/29-10/1
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Chapter 7: Economic Systems
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Spradley 13. Reciprocity and the Power of Giving
10/3-10/6
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Chapter 8: Sex and Marriage
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Spradley 18. Family and Kinship in Village India
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19. Polyandry
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21. Symbolizing Roles: Behind the Veil
10/8-10/10
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Chapter 9: Family and Household
10/13
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Chapter 10: Kinship and Descent
10/15
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Chapter 11: Grouping by Sex, Age, Common Interest, and Class
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Spradley 22. Society and Sex Roles
10/17 (Fri.) Review
10/20 (Mon.) Exam 2
Unit 3
10/22 (Wed.) Second paper due
10/24-10/27
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Chapter 12: Political Organization and Social Control
10/29-10/31
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Chapter 13: Religion and the Supernatural
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Spradley 11. India's Sacred Cow
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31. Revitalization Drives American Militias
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32. Cargo Cults
11/3-11/7
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videos, Popul Vuh, Maya Cargo System, A Poor Man Shames Us All
11/10-11/14
11/17-11/21
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Chapter 15: Cultural Change
11/24 Spradley 28. The Inupiat Eskimo Case
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34. The Kayapo Resistance
11/26-12/3
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Chapter 16: The Future of Humanity
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Spradley 12. Adaptive Failure: Easter's End
12/5 (Fri.) Third paper due
12/5 Conclusion
12/8 Review
12/10 (Wed.) Exam 3
ESSAY TOPICS
First Essay: No late papers accepted.
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2-4 pages long.
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Correct bibliographic information is essential.
Choose one topic.
A. If you were going to do a study as an anthropologist which culture
would you choose? What would be the focus of this study? Explain why you
would choose this culture. What problems might you encounter? Scan some
ethnographies to see what has been written about this group. Note: China,
American Indians, Muslims, as topics are too broad; narrow your choice
down to the Tarahumara of northern Mexico, French farmers, or students
from Saudi Arabia in Austin, for example. (no extinct cultures)
B. Interview a person or a family from another culture (non-English
speaking), recent arrivals to the US. What do they have to say about the
differences and similarities between their culture and modern American
culture (food, greetings, bathrooms, attitudes about work, sports, money)?
What are some of the things that caused culture shock (explain what it
is to them) for them? Do they have positive or negative feelings about
their culture or ours? How have people in our culture reacted to them?
What are some of their thoughts concerning speaking English and their native
language? What do they hope to achieve (school, job, etc.)? What is their
family background (married? siblings?)? Are they likely to become US citizens?
Why or why not?
C. Write a researched essay on one of the topics on language discussed
in class. This could include teaching human language to animals, reconstruction
of ancestral languages, the rapid disappearance of many of the world's
languages, or the formation of creole languages. Use specific cultural
examples.
D. Do some research on the child rearing techniques of another culture.
How do they differ from our ideas about child rearing? What kind of effect
do the techniques have on the personality of the adults in the culture?
Information for bibliography for essays:
proofread!
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Please include a cover sheet with your name and the title of your paper
on it, as well as my name and the course.
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An encyclopedia, by itself, is not enough of a source, nor are our textbooks,
or the lectures.
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Be sure to document the words and ideas of other people you use when writing
your paper. All ideas not your own must have a reference. Using someone
else's information without attribution is plagiarism and will lower your
grade drastically. Quotation marks are not necessary unless you use the
exact words of your original source. References need to be given in the
text of your paper. The author's surname (unless it appears in the text),
year date of the publication, and page number are enclosed in parentheses
(Turabian 1973:184). An alphabetized bibliography at the end of the paper
supplies complete information in the following forms:
Haviland, William A.
1996 Cultural Anthropology, 8th edition. Orlando: Harcourt Brace
Jovanovich College Publishers.
McCurdy, David W. and Spradley, James P.
1997 Conformity and Conflict: Readings in Cultural Anthropology,
9th edition. New York: Harper Collins.
Turabian, Kate
1973 A Manual for Writers of Term Papers, Theses, and Dissertations.
Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
Turpin, Solveig A.
1984 The Red Linear Style Pictographs. Plains Anthropologist
29:181-189.
Second Essay: No late papers will be accepted.
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2-4 pages (one and a half is not long enough).
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Use sources other than the texts and lectures.
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IMPORTANT: Give bibliographic information. Choose one topic. No extinct
cultures.
1. The Potlatch, the Kula Ring, and the Cargo system are examples
of leveling mechanisms. Using one as an example, define the concept and
explain its functions and purpose in a particular society. Give an ethnographic
example, you may use an example other than these three.
2. Look through the ethnographic literature, or interview some one
from another culture, for examples of marriage practices different from
ours (for example polygamous or arranged marriage). Compare and contrast
the practices and explain how they function with other aspects of the culture.
Is divorce easy or hard? Why? Use a specific culture to illustrate your
ideas.
3. Do some research on a caste system. How is caste indicated? What
resources do the different castes control? How do the castes depend on
each other? How do other social institutions (government, religion, etc.)
affect the system? Is mobility possible? What does it mean to modern life?
How does it integrate, while dividing people? Caste structure and history
are less important than a description of the actual reality today.
References to help you get started, not a comprehensive list:
Cargo system:
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Peasants, Eric Wolf
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Economics and Prestige in a Maya Community, Frank Cancian
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Zinacantan, Evon Vogt
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Machine Age Maya, Manning Nash
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Fields of Tzotzil, George Collier
Kula Ring:
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The Kula, New Perspectives on Massim Exchange, Jerry Leach (essays
by many authors, photos)
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Women of Value, Men of Renown, Annette B. Weiner
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From Muyuw to the Trobriands: Transformations Along the Northern Side
of the Kula Ring, Frederick H. Damon (structural analysis of variation
in a regional system)
Potlatch:
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An Iron Hand Upon the People: the Law Against the Potlatch on the NW
Coast, Douglas Cole and Ira Chaikin (a history of the Potlatch, the
law, the Indian response, photos)
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The Gitksan Potlatch, John W. Adams, (detailed, first hand observations
in the field)
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see also other NW Coast Indians eg. Chinook, Nootka, Tsinshan, Bella Coola,
Tlinglit
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"Masks of the Ancestors" and "Underground Potlatch," Natural History,
October 1991
Marriage -
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The Western Educated Hindu Woman, Rama Mehta
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Guest of the Sheik, Elizabeth Fernea
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Nisa, Majorie Shostak
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Dynamics of Polyandry, Nancy Levine
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"A Bride for Raman," Natural History, March 1988
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"Taraka's Ghost," Natural History, Oct. 1990
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"Burning Widows, Burning Brides: The Perils of Daughterhood in India, Dorothy
Stein, in Pacific Affairs Journal 1988
Caste -
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in Nepal: "And the Band Played On," Natural History, Sept. 1991
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Eta or Burakumin: Buraku Liberation Research Institute
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The Last Primitive Peoples (Crown Pub. NY 1976)
Third Essay: Absolutely no late papers will be
accepted.
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2-5 pages (one and a half is not long enough).
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Use sources other than the texts. Rather than books, you will probably
want to rely more on periodicals, many of which are available at the ACC
library.
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IMPORTANT: Correct bibliographic information is essential.
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Choose one topic. You should focus on culture change in a contemporary
culture in whichever topic you choose.
1. Do some research on religion in the everyday life of a culture (not
ours). Describe how one particular religious institution changes as a culture
changes, as it is affected by outside influences and internal changes.
How does religion function to meet old and new needs in the day-to-day
life of the people practicing it today? For example: how is a religious
festival or ritual different today from the way it was in the past? Why
has it changed? How does symbolism reflect change?
Or interview someone from another country who has a religion different
from our Judaeo-Christian tradition. (for example: Hinduism, Buddhism,
Islam, Shintoism). Is there a place of worship here in Texas? See if you
can arrange to attend. How has this religion adapted to fit in to American
culture in Austin? How does it meet the new needs of a family coming from
far away? Do they practice in a new way here? How does their religion affect
their views on American culture?
2. Development schemes and multinational corporations have had a major
impact on the third world. Give one or two specific examples. Describe
its success or failure in terms of the impact it has on the lives of those
affected. Who gains, who loses? Who designed it, how is it implemented?
3. Tribal cultures are sometimes called the Fourth World. The people
might not even be aware they are part of a larger state. Use one contemporary
ethnographic example to show the fate of these tribes today. This can be
anything from annihilation, to uneasy integration, to more rarely, strategies
that allow them to keep their culture.
A few of the many possible examples:
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Amazon region: Urueu-Wau-Wau, Kayapo, Hurani (Guarani)
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Philippines: Agta, Lumad
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Africa: Masai, Dani, Nuba, Ogoni
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Indonesia: Dayak
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Andes: Aymara, Quechua
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Australia: Aborigines
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Europe: Saami
Articles you might want to look up, not a comprehensive list, just to get
you started:
Religion -
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"Cultural Encounter: Islam in Java," History Today, Nov.1984
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"Return of the Pleiades," Natural History, June 1987
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"Night of the Radishes," Natural History, Dec. 1986
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"Dark Side of the Shaman," Natural History, Nov. 1989
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"Tubakou's Spirit Flight," Natural History, July 1992
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"Judas Transformed," Natural History, March 1994
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"Sorcers' Apprentice," The Sciences, Jan/Feb 1996
other possible topics include:
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the Virgin of Guadalupe
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the Day of the Dead in Mexico
Books on development to help you get started:
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Aid as Obstacle: 20 Questions, Frances Lappe, et al. (about our
foreign aid and the hungry, many examples of the problems US food aid causes,
easy to read)
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Only One World: Our Own to Make and Keep, Gerard Piel (general geographical
and historical overview of development, environment, population, agriculture)
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Anthropology and the Global Factory: Studies of the New Industrialization
in the Late 20th Century, eds. Frances Rothstein and Michael Blim (collection
of essays from all over world, presented mostly without analysis, a few
good ones "Women Workers in S. Korea," "Mondragon Coops," others)
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Multinational Managers and Poverty in the Third World, Lee Travis,
ed. (series of essay presenting advice to multinationals on their role
in global development - how difficult it is, but how beneficial they think
they are in upgrading the life of the poor, sort of an updated version
of bestowing civilization on savages)
see also: New Scientist, The Economist, The Ecologist,
Scientific American
If you have any comments or questions about this Web page, please contact
Michael Pool at
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512-223-3385
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snail mail: 1212 Rio Grande, Austin, TX 78748
Anthropology Program
Last Updated 3/4/98
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