Art, Music and Folklore/Political Life Flashcards

1
Q

What is art?

A

human actions and productions that have aesthetic value and meaning (e.g., symbolic, expressive, emotional) beyond simple mechanical function

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2
Q

What are some examples of body adornment?

A

tattoos, jewelry, makeup, clothing, etc.

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3
Q

What meanings can tattoos have?

A

serve for decoration, signify status, indicate clan/lineage membership, and mark ritual transitions

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4
Q

Relationship between visual arts and social stratification

A

a study by John L. Fischer hypothesized that the degree of social stratification in a society would be associated with formal properties (complexity, space utilization, symmetry/repetition of design elements) of art

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5
Q

Space utilization

A

Low social stratification is associated with high levels of open space utilization, and high social stratification is associated with low levels of open space utilization, and vice versa.

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6
Q

Symmetry

A

Low social stratification is associated with high symmetry, high social stratification is associated with low symmetry

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7
Q

Complexity

A

Low social stratification is associated with high levels of simple complexity, high social stratification is associated with low levels of simple complexity

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8
Q

Music and social stratification

A

Music is shaped by societal organization. Stratified-wordiness and enunciation, polyphony, lead singer with backup. Egalitarian-nonwords, repetition, interlock style

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9
Q

Bourdieu and his argument

A

Bourdieu argued that there is a need to differentiate ourselves, especially among the elite. Our “tastes” can distinguish social classes/groups. Elite aesthetic is not easily accessed, and thus serves as a marker of “upper” status-justification/naturalization

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10
Q

Folklore

A

stories, myths, legends, folktales, riddles, ballads, proverbs, and/or superstitions more or less specific to a cultural group or area. There are two types: traditional and urban legends

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11
Q

Cross-cultural elements of folklore

A

catastrophe (esp. floods), monsters, incest, sibling rivalry, castration, hero’s journey

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12
Q

Kurt Vonnegut and his story arcs

A

man in hole, Cinderella, etc.

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13
Q

Politics

A

mechanisms (e.g., institutions, roles, beliefs) that establish social order and deal with minimizing and controlling social disorder, often through accumulation or use of power

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14
Q

Power

A

the ability to shape, influence, and/or direct the thoughts and actions of others

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15
Q

Bands

A

a fairly small, usually nomadic group local group that is politically autonomous (independent). No higher level of integration exists above the group of closely related people with face-to-face relationships

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16
Q

Examples of a band

A

Australian Aborgines, !Kung

17
Q

Tribes

A

a culturally homogeneous, non-stratified society possessing a common territory, without centralized political or legal institutions, whose members are linked by extended kinship ties, ritual obligations, and mutual responsibility for the resolution of disputes

18
Q

Examples of tribes

A

Yanomamo, Tiv

19
Q

Chiefdoms

A

intermediary in organizational scale and complexity between egalitarian social organizations and bureaucratic, stratified states. Chiefdoms have a political system involving organized inequality of rank, based upon distinctions of kinship and descent

20
Q

Examples of chiefdoms

A

Trobrianders, Samoans

21
Q

States

A

a society characterized by autonomous political institutions, sovereign control of territory, centralized appropriation of surplus, and support of authority through legitimate force

22
Q

Examples of states

A

Inca, Aztec, Roman Empire, the U.S. and most countries today

23
Q

State organization

A

when a society is composed of one or more political units that are states it has state organization

24
Q

Fragile state

A

states are formed by encapsulating smaller (or competing) social formations in efforts to homogenize the encapsulated identities rarely succeed entirely

25
Q

Ascribed status

A

social status a person is assigned at birth or assumed involuntarily later in life

26
Q

Achieved status

A

social position a person takes on voluntarily that reflects both personal responsibility and merit