
Introduction
to Cultural Anthropology
Series Entitled: "Faces of Culture"
Faces of Culture, an introductory cultural anthropology
course, is a provocative study of the structure and process
of culture. This telecourse features dramatic and unique
film footage from around the world, embracing cultures
from all continents, highlighting major life-styles, and
illustrating human adaptation to environment from the
beginnings of the human species to the present.
Faces of Culture focuses on the thesis that every
society is based on an integrated culture that satisfies
human needs and facilitates survival. The course also
explores the ways in which our won culture fits into the
broad range of human possibilities.
PROGRAM
DESCRIPTIONS
1) The Nature of Anthropology
This program provides an introduction to the field of anthropology
in general and the entire series in particular. It emphasizes
a holistic approach to the discipline, focusing on scientific
techniques and the value of each society studied. It explores
how the field developed and how it has changed over time.
The program introduces the student to some of the main theorists
involved in anthropology from its inception, including Charles
Darwin, Franz Boas and Margaret Mead. Concepts central to
the study of anthropology, such as cultural relativism and
ethnocentrism, are introduced through an exploration of
the native cultures of the Turkana tribe, the Kwakiutl Indians,
Tasmanian Aboriginals, and the Omaha tribe.
2) The Nature of Culture
This episode focuses on culture in societies. It defines
culture as a unique set of values, beliefs and practices
those enables us together to reap the benefits from the
locality in which we live. The program begins to answer
such questions as: How does culture develop? How does it
change and adapt to the world around it? The program delves
deeper into the meaning of concepts such as ethnocentrism
and cultural relativism to emphasize their importance in
the field of anthropology. The need to understand how differing
values and beliefs meet the needs of specific cultures is
seen in contrasting examples from other cultures. The Txukarrame
Indians and the Boran tribes of Kenya are examined to illustrate
the degree of variety, as well as the parallels between
and among cultures. The program concludes by showing the
devastating results of one culture's inability to adapt,
demonstrating that the loss affects us all.
3) How Cultures Are Studied
This program provides a case study of how anthropologists
conduct field surveys of other cultures. The program contains
the case study of Napoleon Chagnon, an anthropologist who
carried out an extensive study of the Yanamamo Indians of
Venezuela. Over a period of several years, Dr. Chagnon spent
several months living with the Yanamamo in order to obtain
a complete ethnographic understanding of their culture.
He explains the meaning of many anthropological terms, and
the methods and techniques he used to conduct his studies,
while stressing that in order to conduct a successful field
study, an anthropologist must shed his or her cultural prejudices.
4) Language and Communication
This episode introduces students to the nature of the relationship
between language and culture, and the importance of language
in anthropological study. Several linguists address such
issues as how language develops and evolves; how it is learned;
and how it is transmitted within and between cultures. Terms
such as linguistics, phonetics, morphemes, and syntax are
explained. Case studies such as the development of Black
English in the United States, and the revival of a nearly
extinct language in Canada are included to illustrate the
importance of language in cultural identity. The program
also explores the significance of other forms of communication,
including non-verbal communication and symbolism. Finally,
the program focuses on the way language is interpreted through
a social context and the values of the host society. For
example, does our language change our perception, or does
our perception change our language?
5) Psychological Anthropology
Beginning with a definition of enculturation, this program
describes Margaret Mead's landmark efforts to document the
influence of culture on individual personality by studying
patterns of child rearing in several cultures, including
Samoa. Next the program explores the link between personality
and culture and the concept of national character as it
was studied by anthropologist Ruth Benedict and psychologist
Eric Erikson. National character studies of Japan and Nazi
Germany during the 1940's are described, along with criticisms
of these efforts. The program then examines how societies
have ways of treating illness and individuals who deviate
from accepted norms. Shamans in several societies are shown
including ones from the Melemchi in Nepal, Bali, Laos and
from the Yanomamo Indians of Brazil. The narrator describes
how, through their treatments and rituals, shamans address
the social ills of the group as a whole.
6) Alejandro Mamani: A Case Study in Psychological Anthropology
This program features a case study of Alejandro Mamani,
an elder Aymara Indian whose village is located in the mountains
of Bolivia. The episode focuses on Alejandro's experiences
with an unexplained mental illness diagnosed as spiritual
possession by Alejandro, his family and the members of his
village. Ethnographers trace the man's suffering as he and
his family try to cope with the unpredictability of the
illness and the inevitability of death. The filmmakers are
challenged to move from acting as observers to actively
participating in the study, offering medicine to the suffering
man. They describe, in detail, the effects Alejandro's illness
has on him personally, as well as the effects his death
will have on his property and family. The student is able
to observe the progression of illness as Alejandro deteriorates
from a respected leader in his community, to one whom is
totally dependent on his family for survival. The program
offers insights into the methods different cultures use
to cope with both illness and death.
7) Patterns of Subsistence: Food Foragers and Pastoralists
This program describes food foraging and pastoral societies,
and explores several ancient patterns of subsistence, some
of which are still followed today. The program describes
how many societies adapt to their environment. For example,
the African Kung gather nuts, fruits, berries and roots
in their arid climate, and the Mbuti pygmy hunt large game
in the African rainforest. Another segment shows the Netsilik
Eskimos as they hunt seals in their harsh Arctic environment.
Other segments include the Nepali sherpas as they herd zomo,
a hybrid of a yak and a milk cow, and the Iranian Basseris
as they search for fertile grazing land for sheep and goats.
The program also features a modern forager as he searches
among the discards of an urban area.
8) Patterns of Subsistence: The Food Producers
This program examines several different models of food production
and various features of food-producing societies. First
shown are the Yucatec Maya employing the "slash-and-burn"
technique of soil preparation. Rituals associated with food
production are illustrated with film of Melanesian farmers
practicing the hazardous land-diving ritual originally intended
to ensure a good yam harvest. The program also looks at
several examples of intensive agriculture, including that
practiced by the Khmer in Angkor and by North Americans
on the Great Plains. Other societies featured in the program
are the Taiwanese and wet rice cultivation and the Balinese.
9) Economic Anthropology
From the generalized reciprocity among the !Kung to the
balanced reciprocity of the Yanomamo and the Trobriand Islanders,
this program explains that the economies of many non-Western
societies are based on principles other than currency. In
the highlands of New Guinea, the Mendi are shown engaging
both in balanced reciprocity when they barter a bride price
in pearl shells, and in redistribution when they engage
in a cassowary contest in which they give away their holdings
to gain prestige. A third system of distribution-the marketplace-is
illustrated with scenes of Assante women in Ghana and of
nomads in Afghanistan.
10)
The Highland Maya: A Case Study in Economic Anthropology
This episode explores the complicated "cargo system"
of the Mayan Indian populations of Southern Mexico and Northern
Guatemala. The cargo system has evolved over time into an
amalgamation of ancient Mayan Indian pagan culture and Catholicism
present since Spanish involvement in the region in the seventeenth
century. The social system involves a series of four levels
each man is expected to pass through in his life during
which he is obligated to a period of service to his community.
At each step he pays his village a certain percentage of
his earned income. In return, as a man progresses through
each level, he attains a greater degree of responsibility
and gains greater prestige in his community.
11) Sex and Marriage
This program examines the complex custom of marriage in
various societies and cultures throughout the world. In
addition, it explores the place that sex and sexuality play
in determining the marriage contract. Among the societies
featured are the Turkana tribe of Kenya, Zaire pygmies,
the Asante tribe of Ghana, the Mien of Laos, and the Berbers
of Morocco. Concepts such as endogamy, exogamy, patrillineal,
polygamy, and bride price are introduced and defined. In
addition, the impact some of these customs have on the societies
that practice them is explored. The program shows that in
most non-western societies romantic love plays a lesser
role in determining a marriage contract.
12) Family and Household
This program focuses on the organization of the family as
it exists and is defined in different cultures throughout
the world. Cultural differences such as marriage and naming
customs, inheritance lines and the differences between the
nuclear and extended family are discussed. The impact of
patrillineal versus matrilineal descent, polygamy and female
heads of household are explored, as well as the impact these
customs have on children and future generations. The Mbuti
tribe of Zaire are used to illustrate division of labor
between the sexes and the methods by which traditions and
responsibilities are passed down from mother to daughter
and father to son. The program also shows examples of problems
within the Yanomamo and !Kung culture when their traditional
families come in contact with the elements of modern societies.
Guns, industrialization, access to education and the loss
of historical land all have lasting effects on families
and entire societies. A family in India is used to illustrate
the problems that can arise in a large extended family where
the group is dependent on all its members for labor and
wealth. In this case, one member of the family chooses a
non-traditional role for himself.
13) The Yucatec Maya: A Case Study in marriage and the
Family
The lives of two extended Yucatec Maya are the subjects
of this program. Film footage and commentary by Hubert L.
Smith, whose field research spanned many years in the Maya
community, follow the family of Prudencio Colli Canche,
a traditional extended-family group as its members share
the daily chores, teaching the youngsters in a never-ending
cycle. The second family, that of Reymundo Colli, is experiencing
change and stress because two sons want to break out of
the farming lifestyle, seek more schooling, and move to
the city. The "dependency" training of extended
families is revealed by this challenge, and one of the sons,
unable to cope with a new environment, returns home.
14) Kinship and Descent (Part I)
The program begins with a brief examination of kinship and
descent considerations in the United States, including inheritance
patterns, children's names, married names, and important
family names in business and government. The main focus
of the program is on ways in which other cultures are organized
around descent patterns. These include the matrilineal pattern
of the Trobriand Islanders and the economic and religious
importance of the Mendi clans. Methods of determining descent
are illustrated in ethnographic film footage and with the
use of interesting graphics.
15)
Kinship and Descent (Part II)
This program begins by defining "kindred" and
looking at the role of kindred in food-foraging societies.
The program then examines the various types of kinship and
descent groups in horticultural societies and how such groups
handle larger political and economic functions and domestic
and social activities. Next, the program describes how societies
based on intensive agriculture or industrialization have
developed such institutions as centralized government to
assume the organizing functions handled by kinship and descent
groups in other societies. Illustrative examples in the
program include the kinship terms of the Baruya, the Navajo
matrilineal villages organization and terminology, and the
social patterns in Greek villages that reflect both patrillineal
and matrilineal descent practices. Some of the six major
systems of classifying kin are diagrammed and illustrated
in this program.
16) Age, Common Interest, and Stratification
Human beings require interaction with one another. It is
for this reason that in most large societies, people form
groups and relationships with other people. This program
looks at the existence of groups in society based on age,
common-interest association and social stratification. It
examines the role these groups play in helping to organize
and structure the larger culture, as well as how they help
to preserve or change the existing society. It also looks
at the value set the group operates within and how these
values do or do not reflect the values of the larger society.
Among the groups the program looks at are the Brotherhood
of Sleeping Car Porters, a group of African-Americans formed
around a common-interest.
17) The Aymara: A Case Study in Social Stratification
Through footage made in northern Bolivia, where the heterogeneous
population is socially and economically stratified, this
program provides a close look at the inequities of a sharp
class division between the Spanish-speaking mestizos and
the subordinate Aymara Indians. The class system depicted,
typical of much of Latin America, is apparent not only in
the fields, but in religious practices, the celebratory
fiestas, and even in the classroom. The economic subordination
of the peasantry is battled by the mestizo teacher who,
in one scene, seeks medical help for a child of an impoverished
family. Although a revolution in 1952 brought some changes
in Bolivia, this program show that the Aymara are still
bound by many of the economic and social patterns that existed
before the revolution.
18) Political Organization
All societies need a system of leadership, authority and
cooperation in order to operate successfully and survive.
These systems are called political organization. This program
explores the four major types of political organization
that exist in the world today: bands, tribe chiefdoms and
states. It describes the how these systems developed; the
types of societies for which they are most well suited;
the characteristics that form each type of political organization;
and, the ways they differ from one another. The program
explores the cultures of the !Kung, the Mendi, and the Kpelle
as examples of the band, the tribe and the chiefdom respectively.
Finally, it traces the development of the state as a political
entity characterized by centralized power, a code of law
and the authority to use coercion to impose that law. In
addition, explores the concept of legitimacy and coercion
as they apply to the state. Through an examination of the
theocratic government of Tibet, it describes some of the
complications inherent in the survival of the modern state.
19) Social Control
This program describes the processes and methods societies
use to establish and maintain social control. It mainly
emphasizes interaction among members of the same group,
but some attention is given to disputes between societies.
The program describes the differences between internal control
(i.e. religious dictates) and external control (i.e. code
of law), methods of enforcement and why one type of social
control might best serve the society's needs. It explores
the various functions law might serve in different cultures,
as well as the concepts of formal and informal dispute settlement,
negotiation, adjudication and mediation. Finally, the program
explores the phenomenon of war and explains how the concept
of world view is integral to explaining why and how war
occurs.
20)
Religion and Magic
All societies incorporate some way to provide meaning and
explain the unknown into their culture. These structures
are called religion. This program illustrates and describes
various examples of religion around the world and defines
the difference between religion and magic. It includes footage
of American Indians practicing animism, demonstrating their
belief in the Great Spirit and attempting to restore the
balance between good and evil by the ritualistic carvings
of a medicine mask. Also shown are scenes of religious practices
among the Highland Maya, who have combined ancient beliefs
and Roman Catholicism; the ritual of the Eka Dasa Tudra,
a complicated ceremony celebrated by the Balinese that links
the worlds of gods, people and demons; and modern Hare Krishnas
in Los Angeles. Revitalization movements, such as those
of the Mormons, also are depicted. The program concludes
with a look at modern industrial nations where religious
practices have been separated from the secular aspects of
life and culture. Finally, there is a brief discussion of
the role science plays in modern societies and its relationship
to religion.
21) The Asmat of New Guinea: A Case Study in Religion
and Magic
This detailed study of the Asmat, a cannibalistic society
of western New Guinea, shows their use of religion and magic
as tools for survival in a world they perceive as hostile
and threatening. The centrality of trees in their religion
is shown by scenes in which the Asmat carve a sacred "bis"
pole from a mangrove tree to release spirits of the dead,
and butcher and skin a sago palm as if it were human to
release the starch that is the mainstay of their diet. The
program explores many facets of the Asmat society linked
to religious beliefs. Games the children play are designed
to teach them skills of headhunting; during a feast, the
coconut is consumed to symbolize eating the brains of one's
enemy. Concluding segments of the program consider how economic
development and modernization, including the government's
ban on headhunting, will affect the Asmats' religious beliefs
and practices, which are such an integral part of their
total culture.
22) The Arts (Revised)
This program focuses on different forms of artistic expression
as they exist in all cultures. It presents the many kinds
of art and explores the variety of functions served by the
arts: fulfillment of the need for individual creative expression;
expression of peoples' conceptions of the unknown or spiritual
world; and reflection of cultural values and ideas. Among
the arts and cultures featured in the program are body painting
among the tribes of the Amazon River basin in Brazil; the
link between arts and religion as shown in the monuments
of the Egyptian Empire; the sand painting of Buddhist monks
in Tibet; and the music of Mexican-Americans in the southwestern
United States as an expression of ethnic heritage. Also
shown in the program are several contemporary Western artists
and various artistic creations, including a performance
artist, the AIDS quilt, and Christo's "Running Fence."
23) New Orleans Black Indians: A Case Study in the Arts
This documentary examines the Black Indian tribes of New
Orleans and their Mardi Gras celebration which began in
the 1880's. It describes the origins of the tribes as well
as Mardi Gras, and focuses on the distinctive folk art features
of the celebration - including the songs, dances and particularly
the elaborate costumes - which hold great social significance
are a form of artistic expression for the Black Indians.
The program includes comments by several of the participants
in which they express the historic symbolism and intense
relationships expressed in the celebration.
24) Cultural Change
This program explores the impact of culture change on various
indigenous people and cultures. It describes the various
ways culture changes, specifically through innovation, diffusion,
and colonialism. The student is introduced to several anthropologists
who have studied the effects of culture change on various
groups. The dramatic effect of modern agricultural techniques
on the traditional horticultural economy of Mali illustrates
some consequences of poor planning. The program uses the
struggles of the !Kung in Africa to illustrate the idea
of culture loss. Here, conservation and modernization have
had a serious impact on the native populations of people
and wildlife. In the northern regions of the Brazilian Amazon,
the program shows that mining has had a tremendous influence
on the native Yanomamo Indians. Finally, some of the positive
effects of modern technology and culture change are discussed
through a look at the Mayan Indians of Mexico. For example,
while roads, electricity and running water have reached
the native populations, many traditional agricultural ways
still survive.
25) Cricket the Trobriand Way: A Case Study in Cultural
Change
This program focuses on "syncretism," the anthropological
concept which describes the process by which people borrow
elements of a foreign culture and combine them with native
customs, forming a unique amalgamation of cultures. As an
example of this phenomenon, the program uses the game of
cricket as it exists in a modified version in the Trobriand
Islands. The program first traces the history of the sport
and describes how the sport was first introduced to the
native population by the British in the 19th century. Since
then, the island people have integrated the game into their
own culture, modifying rules and combining it with native
customs including magic, dance and chanting. The program
includes footage of many practices of the game in its modified
form.
26) The Future of Humanity
The final program addresses the compelling problem of preserving
the diversity of human cultures in a world that often appears
to be rushing toward a one-world culture. The program includes
several examples of how indigenous peoples are making the
future their own by taking back the past. A Kwakiutl woman
describes how her people negotiated the return of masks
and other artifacts from Canadas National Museum of Man
and built a Box of Treasures to house the items and serve
as a center for preserving and renewing their cultural traditions,
The Yanomamo are featured in another segment, which show
how they are learning to defend their lands against outsiders
and includes comments by Napoleon Chagnon on his concerns
for the Yanomamos survival and on the Venezuelan governments
experiment with a biosphere reserve encompassing the Yanomamo
territory. Throughout the program, many representatives
of indigenous people express their concerns and desire for
protecting their societies.
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