Utilisateur
Race is a social idea used to group people based on assumed physical differences, not a true biological division of humanity.
Because humans do not fall into clear biological races, and genetic variation within so-called racial groups is often greater than between them.
Because people believe in it, build institutions around it, and use it to justify inequality and different treatment.
It means race was created by societies and given meaning through history, politics, and culture rather than biology.
Racism is prejudice, discrimination, or unequal treatment based on race or perceived racial differences.
Racism is not just personal bias; it also works through social systems, institutions, and unequal access to resources and status.
Scientific racism is the false use of science to claim that some races are naturally superior or inferior to others.
Because it helped justify slavery, colonialism, segregation, and inequality by pretending racism was scientific truth.
Eugenics is the idea that society should control reproduction to increase people with “desired” traits and reduce people with “undesired” traits.
It led to forced sterilization, discrimination, and the belief that some lives were worth more than others.
Ethnicity is a social identity based on shared culture, language, history, ancestry, and traditions.
Ethnicity is based mainly on cultural traits, while race is wrongly assumed to be based on biology and physical appearance.
Yes, ethnicity can shift over time because people may adopt new cultural practices, languages, or identities.
Language is a structured system of symbols and rules humans use to create and communicate meaning.
Communication is any way of sending information, but language is a specific symbolic system with grammar and shared meaning.
Humans are biologically capable of language, but the actual language we speak is learned through culture.
A sign is anything that stands for or points to something else.
A symbol is a type of sign whose meaning is learned and based on social agreement, not natural connection.
Symbols are arbitrary and meaningful because people agree on them, while other signs may have a direct or natural link to what they mean.
The signifier is the form of the sign, such as a word, sound, or image.
The signified is the idea or concept that the sign refers to.
It is the idea that language influences how people think and understand the world.
No, the stronger version says language determines thought, but the more accepted version says language influences thought.
It shows that language is not just a tool for expression; it can shape perception, categories, and worldview.
Non-verbal communication is communication without words, such as gestures, posture, facial expressions, and use of space.
Paralanguage is the non-word part of speech, like tone, pitch, volume, speed, and emotion in the voice.
Silent language refers to non-verbal cultural cues like body language, personal space, timing, and gestures.
Power is the ability to influence, control, or direct the behavior and choices of others.
Politics is about how power is organized, used, negotiated, and challenged in society.
Coercive power is power based on force, threats, or punishment.
Persuasive power is power based on influence, agreement, or convincing others.
Internalized control happens when people follow rules because they accept them as normal or right.
Externalized control happens when rules are enforced from outside through pressure, punishment, or authority.
Political organization is the way a society arranges leadership, decision-making, order, and conflict resolution.
A band is a small, flexible, usually foraging group with informal leadership and little social hierarchy.
A tribe is a larger, usually uncentralized society made of kin groups, villages, or lineages with informal leaders.
A chiefdom is a centralized political system led by a chief with inherited authority and some social ranking.
A state is a centralized political system with formal laws, government institutions, and authority over a territory.
Elman Service.
He created a major anthropological classification system for comparing political organization.
Social stratification is the unequal ranking of people into layers based on wealth, power, prestige, or status.
Class is a form of social stratification based mainly on economic position and is relatively more flexible.
Caste is a rigid hereditary system of social ranking where status is assigned at birth and mobility is very limited.
Collective identities are shared identities formed through belonging to a group, such as nation, ethnicity, religion, or community.
Identities are constructed through social interaction, culture, history, symbols, and shared experiences.
An imagined community is a group, especially a nation, whose members feel connected even though they will never know most other members personally.
Because the sense of belonging is socially created through symbols, stories, media, and shared identity.
The sense of self is a person’s understanding of who they are as an individual and social being.
Communities are communicated through language, media, rituals, symbols, shared history, and everyday social practices.
Sex refers to biological traits such as chromosomes, hormones, reproductive organs, and anatomy.
Gender refers to the social and cultural meanings, roles, behaviors, and expectations associated with being male, female, or another identity.
Sex is biological, while gender is socially and culturally constructed.
Gender roles are the expected behaviors, duties, and traits a society assigns to people based on gender.
Performing gender means expressing gender through behavior, clothing, speech, and actions in ways society recognizes.
Yes, different cultures define and express gender in different ways.
It means not all societies see gender as only male or female, and some recognize additional gender categories.
Because human identities and cultural systems are more complex than just two categories.
Sexuality refers to how people experience desire, intimacy, attraction, and sexual expression.
Sexual orientation is the pattern of a person’s emotional, romantic, or sexual attraction to others.
Gender is about identity and social role, while sexual orientation is about attraction.
Food-getting strategies are the ways people obtain food, such as foraging or producing it.
Food foraging is getting food by hunting, fishing, and gathering naturally available resources.
Food production is growing plants or raising animals for food.
Horticulture is small-scale farming using simple tools and human labor.
Pastoralism is a food-producing strategy based on herding domesticated animals.
Domestication is the process by which humans selectively breed plants and animals so they become useful and dependent on humans.
It created more stable food supplies, supported larger populations, and helped lead to permanent settlements.
It provided food, labor, transport, clothing materials, and helped transform human societies.
It began around 10,000 to 12,000 years ago in different parts of the world.
It happened in several world regions, including the Fertile Crescent, East Asia, Africa, and the Americas.
Production, distribution, and consumption.
Production is the process of creating or obtaining goods and resources.
Distribution is the movement or sharing of goods and resources among people.
Consumption is the use of goods and resources.
Modes of exchange are the different ways goods and services move between people, such as reciprocity, redistribution, and market exchange.
Reciprocity is the exchange of goods or services between people or groups with an expectation of return.
Redistribution is when goods are collected by a central figure or institution and then handed out again.
Market exchange is the buying and selling of goods based on prices, money, and supply and demand.
A gift often creates social relationships and obligations, while money makes exchange more impersonal and calculated.
Potlatch is a ceremonial feast and gift-giving system where wealth is distributed or destroyed to show status, generosity, and social power.
It shows that economic exchange is not only about profit, but also about prestige, relationships, and cultural meaning.
The way resources are produced and distributed affects who has wealth, power, and opportunities.
Because inequality shapes everyday life, social status, access to resources, and relationships between groups.
