Chapter 8 Flashcards
What is social organization?
The patterning of human interdependence in a given society through the actions and decisions of its members.
What is power transformative capacity?
The ability to transform a given situation
What is politics?
The relationship between social organization, power, and individual and group action
What is political anthropology?
The study of power, political structure, political organization, and political action in human society.
What are Joan Vincent’s three stages of political anthropology?
- Formative Political Anthropology
- Classical Political Anthropology
- Postcolonial Anthropology and Political Economy
What is Formative Political Anthropology?
Early studies of the political organization of non-Western societies (late 19th century and early 20th century)
Focused on binary between state and stateless
Rooted in rigid catergories in a unilineal evolutionary framework that privileged European assumptions around power, authority, and organization
What did Lewis Henry Morgan do?
Demonstrated how kinship organizes social life
What was Thomas Hobbes’s (1588-1679) famous book Leviathan (1651) about?
He details the importance of a structured government to counter the chaos of the natural impulses on humanity.
What is Classical Political Anthropology?
Closely associated with British structural-functionalism
Categories and typologies focused on difference between decision making authority in two types of societies
egalitarian societies
stratifies societies
centralized and uncentralized authority
What are egalitarian societies?
Societies in which individuals enjoy equal status and decisions are made through consensus.
What are stratified societies?
Societies in which there is a permanent hierarchy that accords some members privileged across to wealth power and prestige.
What did Lewellen do?
Created two major catergories of political organization-centrailized and uncentralized authority- that were futher divided into various subgroups.
What was the postcolonial political and political economy?
During this phase, anthropologists were concerned with broader questions about power and inequality
Grounded in theoretical apporoaches such as politcal economy, postcolonialism, and globalization
Specifically this phase focuses on the multiplicity of power, rather than preconceived ideas about social and political structures.
What is coercion?
Power and control exercised by force or threat of force
Plays a role in many political systems
When political and institutional coercion comes into play on an atmosphere of gender, racial, ethnic, religous, and economic power struggles, unimaginable violence and destruction can occur
E.g. state violence in Guatemala.
What is ideology as it is referred to in Marxian analysis?
Ideology refers to those beliefs that explain and justify the social arrangements under which people live