Given the answer of the multiple choice questionsthe


Multiple Choice Questions (Enter your answers on the enclosed answer sheet)


1. A study of the garbage people throw away may reveal more about their lifestyles than surveys and interviews because:

a. garbage is easier to analyze than survey data
b. people will often lie about their bad habits
c. fieldwork in garbage dumps is less expensive
d. surveys and interviews are done by sociologists

2. linguistics, which focuses on the comparison and classification of different languages to reveal historical links, can often be used to confirm inferences derived from archaeological or paleoanthropological research on ancient population movements.

a. Historical
b. Socio-
c. Structural
d. Evolutionary

3. An anthropologist interested in structural linguistics might consider doing research on:

a. the relationship between Chinese and Japanese
b. whether bilingual children think differently from children who know only one language
c. why some people speak with a southern accent only when they are with family members
d. what languages are spoken in highland Peru

4. Most of the research of anthropologist Bambi Schieffelin falls under the category of:

a. sociolinguistics
b. ethnomusicology
c. forensic anthropology
d. prehistoric archaeology

5. A unique research strategy of anthropologists which involves learning the language and culture of a group by participating in the group's daily activities is called:

a. assimilation
b. holistic interaction
c. ethnography
d. participant observation

6. Anthropology is said to be "holistic" because it:

a. is concerned with primitive societies
b. makes use of both written and spoken sources
c. combines studies of biological and cultural phenomena
d. studies the mystical aspects of human experience

7. When a scientist begins with a general theory from which testable hypotheses are developed, he or she is said to be using the method.

a. deductive
b. paradigm
c. inductive
d. hypothesis

8. Interconnected hypotheses that offer general explanations for natural or social phenomena are called:

a. paradigms
b. theories
c. deductive methods
d. inductive facts

9. The model of hominid evolution suggests that the gradual evolution of homo erectus into modern human (homo sapiens) populations took place in different regions of the old world, not in one area of the world.

a. multiregional
b. replacement
c. "Garden of Eden"
d. "Eve hypothesis"

10. The term "Paleolithic" also means:

a. "old Stone Age"
b. "ancient knowledge"
c. "before Adam"
d. "cave people"

11. The most important technological development in stone tool production for the upper Paleolithic period was the ability to make:

a. sharpened cores
b. long, narrow blades
c. scraping tools
d. hand axes

12. Archaeologists believe that the first humans came to the new world from .

a. Asia
b. Australia
c. Europe
d. Africa

13. The upper Paleolithic period, which dates from about 40,000 to 10,000 years ago, was characterized by:

a. big game hunting
b. blade tools of many traditions
c. the invention of composite tools
d. All of the above.

14. Upper Paleolithic hunters increased the power and accuracy of their projectiles by using:

a. slingshots
b. spear throwers
c. bows and arrows
d. stone projectile points

15. The term "composite tool" refers to an artifact made by:

a. firing clay into a hard material
b. using bone or antler to remove thin flakes
c. putting two or more materials together
d. several different people

16. At the 15,000-year-old site at Mezirich in the Ukraine, archaeologists have excavated the remains of five shelters made from:

a. rough stone slabs
b. blocks of marble
c. tree trunks
d. mammoth bones

17. An example of a "more" would be:

a. eating with a knife, fork, and spoon
b. not appearing nude in public
c. inviting the neighbors over for a barbecue
d. forgetting to thank the hostess for inviting you

18. When people express disapproval that a healthy, intelligent, unmarried person with no children is living with their parents at age 30, their attitude reflects a common of society in the United States.

a. more
b. ethos
c. folkway
d. ideology

19. To combat the problem of ethnocentrism, twentieth-century anthropologists developed the concept of cultural .

a. relativism
b. primacy
c. symbolism
d. hegemony

20. The Amish emphasize their ethnic differences through .

a. language and dress
b. strange haircuts
c. cars and trains
d. using the newest technology

21. Which of the following is true of symbols?

a. They are rooted deeply in genetic structure.
b. They are different for everyone.
c. They cannot be easily identified.
d. They are arbitrary but meaningful units we use to represent reality.

22. Ways of enforcing mores involve the use of:

a. gossip and public ridicule
b. arrest and imprisonment
c. economic discrimination
d. All of the above.

23. Anthropologists have discovered that children raised together in Israeli Kibbutzim:

a. will usually have successful marriages to one another as adults
b. make lousy marriage partners for one another
c. have a natural tendency towards homosexuality
d. tend to have little appreciation for nuclear families

24. Cross-cultural studies of human sexual desire have revealed that:

a. in all cultures, adults seek to engage in regular sexual activity
b. sexual desire and sexual activity are strongly conditioned by cultural practices
c. there are universal taboos against premarital sex
d. human sexual desire is greatest among people who live in the tropics

25. Value judgments concerning homosexuality are based on:

a. genetics
b. behavior
c. anatomy
d. culture

26. The term "berdache" is used to refer to men in Native American societies who:

a. assert their personal power through public displays of heterosexual prowess
b. choose to abstain from sex so they can focus on spiritual growth
c. wear female clothing and offer sexual services to male warriors
d. participate in homosexual activity only when they are preparing for war

27. The Hijras of India are anatomically male at the time of their birth. However, after having their genitals surgically removed, they dress like females and engage in certain male-only activities like smoking water pipes. In Indian society, they are considered to be:

a. social deviants
b. men
c. women
d. a third gender

28. Claude Lévi-Strauss, in a book entitled The Savage Mind (1966), proposed that:

a. people in small-scale societies have different thought patterns than urban dwellers
b. it is impossible to compare logical systems of primitive and civilized societies
c. there is a universal, logical structure to all human cognition, regardless of culture
d. the thought systems of traditional, indigenous people are superior to our own

29. Noam Chomsky suggests humans are born with a brain prewired to enable us to acquire languages easily. This "prewiring" is referred to as .

a. syntax
b. universal grammar
c. infinite model
d. functional template

30. If someone came up to you and said, "oh, you see everything through rose-colored glasses," this might suggest to you that the person speaking agrees with the premises of:

a. Noam Chomsky's transformational-generative grammar model
b. Derek Bickerton's creole-pidgin theory
c. the Sapir-whorf hypothesis
d. the linguistic field theory

31. Even though all humans have approximately the same set of special senses for perceiving reality (eyes, ears, noses), not all of the sensations in the environment reach our consciousness in the same way since each language filters out different parts of reality. Each language provides the speaker with a built-in filter that heightens, dims, or eliminates certain perceptions, thus determining how we perceive reality. This thesis is called the:

a. Chomsky theory
b. Sapir-whorf hypothesis
c. filter theory
d. Sieve theory

32. Attempts to change linguistic habits such as the adoption of more neutral terms like firefighter, police officer, and first-year student for gender-biased ones like fireman, policeman, and freshman are based on:

a. the idea that language influences social perceptions and gender relations
b. the fact that the deep structure of language, as proposed by Noam Chomsky, is like a fluid sea that can be molded easily to fit social reality
c. False premises about the surface structure of language and the role of gender in society
d. the theory of glottochronology of gender as proposed by Morris Swadesh

33. Glottochronology is:

a. an ancient Germanic language
b. a technique used to discover the original language of the Neanderthals
c. the study of the way the vocal tract is formed to help understand early language learning in children
d. a technique for dating the separation of languages

34. "Did I hear you say that there are four pounds of sulfur in the box?" versus "Did I hear ya say that there are foah pounds of sulfuh in the box?" Is an example of:

a. correct and incorrect English
b. dialect differences in English
c. how surface structure and deep structure interact
d. the difference between syntax and semantics

35. The opposite of cultural relativism is:

a. biological relativism
b. ethnocentrism
c. societal demagoguery
d. biological realism

36. The view that society consists of institutions that serve vital purposes for its people is known as:

a. Functionalism
b. Structuralism
c. Servitude
d. Utilitarianism

37. The term "functionalism" in anthropology refers to the notion that:

a. Ethnographers are competent observers of human culture.
b. Some societies are "functional" while others are "dysfunctional."
c. Cultural practices function to fulfill specific needs in a given society.
d. Culture is transmitted through functions like rituals and ceremonies.

38. The existence of a "joking relationship" (one in which interaction is typified by friendly teasing) between a man and his brothers-in-law would be explained by anthropologist Radcliffe-Brown as:

a. a structured relationship whose function is to reduce potential hostility
b. evidence for cultural influences on individual personality
c. an example of the importance of cultural relativism in kinship roles
d. the basis for materialistic behavior

39. According to Malinowski, magic .

a. has a basis in the existence of supernatural powers in all cultures
b. functions to relieve the anxieties of individuals
c. only works when it has the full participation of a given society
d. has no useful purpose for thinking people

40. According to white's theory of the evolution of sociocultural systems, the most highly evolved culture would be one:

a. using nuclear energy to generate electricity
b. dependent upon animals to pull plows
c. with industries powered by coal and steam
d. based on the use of human labor alone

41. Political systems with centralized bureaucratic institutions that establish power and authority over large populations in a specific territory are known as:

a. bands
b. tribes
c. chiefdoms
d. states

42. Clearly defined norms of a society that provides punishment when violated through the application of formal sanctions by a ruling authority are called:

a. internalized norms
b. ethos
c. laws
d. taboos

43. Ethnologist Leopold Pospisil has suggested that there are four criteria that must be present in order for a norm to be considered a law. Which of the following is not one of these criteria?

a. authority
b. intention of universal application
c. obligation
d. internalization

44. Cross-cultural studies:

a. allow anthropologists to make distinctions between behaviors that are culture specific and those that are universal
b. make it possible for anthropologists to determine if a social trait is biologically inherited or culturally derived
c. are not used anymore by anthropologists; this older methodology has been shown to produce false results due to time and geographic lag
d. cannot be conducted today because there has been too much migration from one culture to another due to modern transportation

45. Full-time religious specialists who serve in an official capacity as the custodians of sacred knowledge are:

a. Shamans
b. Myth-holders
c. Priests and priestesses
d. Ritual retainers

46. Repetitive religious behaviors that communicate sacred symbols to members of society are:

a. rituals
b. myths
c. shamans
d. norms

47. The Kung San term hxaro refers to:

a. a system for circulating material possessions among individuals
b. a complex ritual performed by young boys before their first hunt
c. trade with their agricultural neighbors
d. a type of root obtained in the spring with pointed digging sticks

48. A common form of generalized reciprocity in our society is:

a. common acceptance of the value of the dollar
b. communal use of public restrooms
c. a salary increase accompanying a job promotion
d. getting and giving birthday presents

49. What form of reciprocity would you expect to be the least common among Kung San, Mbuti, and Inuit groups?

a. balanced reciprocity
b. generalized reciprocity
c. negative reciprocity
d. unbalanced reciprocity

50. Negative reciprocity most likely occurs between:

a. friends in modern, westernized societies
b. people of the opposite sex
c. people who differ in age and status
d. strangers and enemies

51. The phrase "original affluent society" refers to:

a. the earliest foragers who lived in rich environments
b. the notion that hunter-gatherers spend little time working
c. the ancient Egyptian civilization
d. the concept of the "noble savage"

52. It has been suggested that, in forager societies, the more concentrated and predictable the resources:

a. the less likely the group will be egalitarian in nature
b. the least amount of reciprocity will occur
c. the more pronounced the conceptions of private ownership and exclusive rights to territories
d. the more likely it will be that negative reciprocity will occur when individuals meet

53. When two or more clans recognize that they share a common genealogical relationship, the more general grouping of these clans is known as a:

a. patrilineage
b. moiety
c. phratry
d. descent group

54. A society that is organized into moieties (a terminology derived from the french) has a particular social organization that structures it into:

a. several competing patrilineal clans
b. a single, fictional family
c. a clear, pyramidal hierarchy
d. equal halves with specific functions

55. Levi-Strauss has used the term "generalized exchange" to refer to a cycle of marital exchange in which, among lineages a, b, and c:

a. men of each lineage always marry within their lineage
b. men of lineages a and b always marry women from lineage c
c. lineage b always gives women to lineage a, but takes its wives from lineage c
d. men of each lineage always marry outside of their lineage

56. Polygyny in tribal societies is most closely related to:

a. hunting practices
b. bride service
c. a moiety social structure
d. the practice of warfare

57. When the descent group of a man transfers some of its wealth to the descent group of a woman at or around the time of their marriage, this practice is known as:

a. bondage
b. levirate
c. bridewealth
d. chattel

58. Among the functions of bridewealth is:

a. guaranteeing that a woman will be considered personal property
b. compensation to her family for the loss of a woman's labor
c. freeing the husband of any responsibilities to the bride's kin group
d. paying for the costs of an elaborate wedding

59. A major function of music, dance, and poetry in chiefdom societies was to:

a. provide entertainment and comic relief for the chief and his family
b. pay homage to the legitimacy of the chiefs and their ancestral deities
c. enable the lower classes to have an outlet for their hostilities that did not threaten the chiefs
d. divide society into different artistic strata to promote competition and creativity

60. A hierarchical society is one in which:

a. all individuals have an equal opportunity to achieve wealth and status
b. a town or village is ruled by a tribal council of elders or respected individuals
c. some individuals have access to more wealth, status, and power than others
d. political authority is expressed in pictographic symbols called hieroglyphs

61. The political structures of chiefdoms differ from those of tribes because in a chiefdom:

a. leadership is vested in an institutionalized office that exists independently of a particular person
b. the central leadership position is inherited or passed down within a single ruling family
c. tribal leaders maintain absolute authority, usually enforced by physical intimidation
d. political power derives mostly from personal qualities, such as intelligence or skill

62. The rule of primogeniture in the succession of political authority:

a. provided for continuity of the political system and avoided a power struggle when the chief died
b. enhanced the prestige of the king
c. usually caused a power struggle within the central chiefly hierarchy
d. often generated regional warfare that was tied to the symbiosis of the area

63. Through the control of resources and surplus goods, chiefs were able to ensure loyalty and deference from the general population. This status and authority enabled the chiefs to do all of the following except:

a. recruit armies
b. distribute land and water rights to certain families
c. sentence someone to death for violating social norms
d. maintain absolute power over their subjects

64. According to anthropologist, Robert Carneiro, the objective of many chiefs was to:

a. increase the extent of their territory in order to control the surplus production of surrounding communities
b. maintain the peace with their neighbors in order to avoid armed conflict
c. become full-time religious leaders and use impressive rites and rituals to prove they were gods
d. disencumber themselves of material possessions and incur debts of personal obligations from their followers through potlatch-like ceremonies

65. Slavery took on different forms depending upon the political economies and demographic features of the agricultural state society. For example, in some African societies, slavery corresponded to an "open system" in which slaves could be incorporated into domestic kin groups and even become upwardly mobile. In contrast, "closed systems" of slavery provided no opportunities for upward mobility or incorporation into kin groups. The open system of slavery occurred:

a. where land was scarce and population density high
b. where land was relatively abundant and less populated
c. in areas that had rigid caste systems such as Greece, Rome, and China
d. when there was a lot of surplus generated from agriculture and new markets needed to be opened to accommodate the distribution of this excess wealth

66. The first codified laws originated in the near eastern civilization of Babylon. Based on standardized procedures for dealing with civil and criminal offenses, this Babylonian code of law is known as the:

a. Laws of Babylon
b. Precepts of order
c. Code of hammurabi
d. Civil enactments of order

67. State organized rituals were also referred to as:

a. rites of legitimation
b. universalistic religions
c. ecclesiastical religions
d. religious traditions

68. Judaism, Christianity, Islam, Hinduism, and Buddhism are considered religions because their spiritual messages apply to all of humanity rather than just their own cultural history and legacy.

a. ecclesiastical
b. animistic
c. universalistic
d. volatile

69. State organized rituals that reinforced divine authority of the ruler are known as:

a. rites of authority
b. rites of legitimation
c. rites of power
d. ceremonies of intimidation

70. Of the following, which is not a stated reason for the collapse of state-level societies?

a. an innate, inevitable aspect of society
b. depletion of key resources
c. human mismanagement
d. people tired of repressive governments

71. The primary mode of social mobility in Japanese society is:

a. education
b. luck
c. inheritance
d. what is called burakumin and eta

72. There are about three million native-born Japanese who are descendants of people who worked in the leather-tanning business. These individuals, even though they are physically indistinguishable from other Japanese, have the lowest status in japan and are confined to ghetto areas. They are known as:

a. burakumin or eta
b. samurai
c. ninja
d. degradus

73. As Europe and America began to industrialize, the political organizations were transformed. Members of the middle class became economically powerful and were drawn to ideas of popular sovereignty. Popular sovereignty means that:

a. kings and queens should retain ultimate political power
b. people, rather than rulers, were the ultimate source of political authority
c. what is trendy at the moment is the best way to run the economy
d. political power should be vested in the elite and upper classes, rather than the lower classes

74. A sense of loyalty to the nation-state based on shared language, values, and culture is called:

a. perestroika
b. ethnocentrism
c. nationalism
d. statehood

75. One of the most distinctive features of law in industrial societies is the proliferation of public and procedural law, referred to as:

a. tort law
b. administrative law
c. habeas corpus
d. litigation law

76. The decline in the influence of religion in society is called:

a. de-evolution
b. secularization
c. atheism
d. conservatism

77. Yanomamö Indians who chose to reside in Christian mission stations:

a. have enjoyed unprecedented economic success
b. are unusually 100% literate in their native language
c. are taught to value and preserve their native culture
d. have become completely dependent on the missionaries

78. The adoption of the shotgun by Yanomamö hunters has resulted in:

a. depletion of game animals from rainforest habitats
b. protein surpluses in the Yanomamö diet
c. reduction of hunting ranges
d. independence from a western cash economy

79. The discovery of gold within Yanomamö territory has led to:

a. economic prosperity for certain rainforest tribes
b. increased government taxation of Indian communities
c. massacres of Yanomamö men, women, and children
d. better definitions of reservation boundaries

80. Saudi Arabian control of the Al-murrah bedouins has been accomplished by making their traditional leader, the emir:

a. the head of an independent state
b. a common Saudi citizen
c. a prisoner for life
d. a dependent government official

81. Throughout the Arabian peninsula, bedouin communities are becoming:

a. absorbed into existing nation-states
b. economically self-sufficient
c. autonomous nations with their own governments
d. wealthy through oil revenues

82. As a result of policies of industrialization and modernization under the Shah of Iran, the Qashqa'i nomads began to:

a. demand more autonomy
b. manufacture cigars
c. adapt an agricultural way of life
d. live in cities like Tehran

83. Among the many racist events in U.S. History, little-known legislation in several states made which kind of intermarriage illegal?

a. Filipino-white
b. Korean-white
c. Jewish-Christian
d. Native American-White

84. During the period 1901-1920, most legal immigrants into the United States were from:

a. Latin America
b. southern and eastern Europe
c. northern and western Europe
d. Asia

85. When minority ethnic groups want to resist cultural hegemony by the dominant ethnic group, they often try to secede and develop their own nation states. This is called a(n):

a. pluralist movement
b. multicultural movement
c. ethnonationalist movement
d. colonialist movement

86. Mohandas Gandhi in India, Jomo Kenyatta in east Africa, and Simon Bolivar in Latin America all mobilized new forms of:

a. ethnonationalism
b. assimilation
c. circumstantialism
d. primordialism

87. The model of ethnicity in which boundary markers such as language, clothing, or other traits are not based on deeply-rooted, enduring connections to an ethnic identity is called the:

a. ethnogenesis model
b. biological assimilation model
c. circumstantialist model
d. primordialist model

88. Non-voluntary or forced cultural assimilation of a minority group by a government is termed:

a. genocide
b. ethnocide
c. the "melting pot" approach
d. segregation

89. Anthropological research may help assess global issues such as population growth, environmental destruction, and technological change by providing a more cautious and analytical approach. This is because anthropology:

a. relies upon the concept of ethical relativism, and it can make major value judgments that other disciplines are incapable of handling or making
b. uses the holistic approach; it has always been concerned with precisely those aspects of human interaction with the environment that are becoming widely recognized by scientists studying global changes in the environment
c. has been almost impulsive when studying cultural change and innovation, causing anthropologists to be very liberal and impetuous in their recommendations concerning changes in the relationship between human cultures and the physical environment

90. Ethnographic research aimed at examining the green revolution, which is the spread of mechanized agriculture, has found that:

a. this revolution is proceeding smoothly in many third world countries, providing much needed food for the lower classes, especially the small farmers
b. these innovations have created a number of unintended social and economic problems, such as widening the gap between the rich and poor because wealthy farmers buy out smaller farmers, creating a class of landless peasants
c. Many of the genetically engineered plants and animals do not survive and reproduce in different climates and geographical locations, creating problems of waste disposal of excess carcasses and erosion/soil degradation when plants die en masse
d. individuals in cultures other than the west have found that the mechanization of agriculture leaves them with too much free-time; as a result, crime, spouse abuse, and drug addiction increase exponentially

91. According to ethnographic research conducted by Murray Leaf, the green revolution has been successfully implemented in:

a. Mexico City, Mexico
b. Shahidpur, India
c. Rio de Janiero, Brazil
d. western Samoa

92. Dependency theorists suggest that multinational corporations are just a new form of neocolonialism aimed at supplying the western world with natural resources and cheap labor. These corporations, rather than helping the populace, actually intensify many of the problems of third world countries by:

a. making it possible to get cheap food and adequate housing
b. creating benefits for a wealthy elite and a small middle class while allowing the vast majority of the population to remain in poverty
c. establishing a strong lower class that eventually overthrows the ruling elite in the country
d. Showing the people all of the riches, modern conveniences, and lifestyles that the majority of the population cannot ever possess

93. Anthropologist Marvin Harris has suggested that the entire fabric of society in the former Soviet Union was undermined by:

a. Marxist theories of social organization
b. influence from the cultures of the U.S. and Europe
c. widespread racial prejudice and ethnic conflict
d. deficiencies in economic infrastructure

94. Perestroika and glasnost are terms that refer to:

a. the power of the masses and religious ideology
b. military readiness and nationalistic sentiment
c. increasing capitalism and freedom of expression
d. totalitarianism and intolerance for ideas critical of the government

95. Since Mao Zedong's death, China's leaders have:

a. outlawed students from gaining degrees in the United States
b. abolished the commune system
c. relied on communist party cadres to instill egalitarian ideals
d. endorsed and attained political reforms

96. Anthropologist Katherine Verdery, who carried out ethnographic work in Romania, identified all but the following as a dilemma currently facing this post-socialist nation:

a. gender inequality reemerging
b. black markets and organized crime
c. manipulation of legal and political apparatus by former socialist bureaucrats to gain personal economic opportunities
d. religious institutions working in opposition to capitalist enterprises

97. The first of the many federal acts to protect archaeological sites was the:

a. historic sites act
b. national environmental policy act
d. convention on cultural property
d. antiquities act

98. Anthropologists John Van Willigen and V. C. Channa found that the increase in dowry deaths was partially the result of:

a. rapid price increases for consumer goods
b. decrease in the average age of the bride
c. increase in the practice of bridewealth among rural families
d. the repeal of national laws that made the institution of dowry illegal

99. Which of the following was not among Van Willigen and Channa's recommendations for decreasing the incidence of dowry death in India?

a. strengthening legislation that prohibits the institution of dowry
b. establishing a gender-neutral inheritance law in which women and men receive equal shares
c. passing a requirement for universal marriage registration and licensing
d. working towards the achievement of gender equality in India

100. The word "metaculture" is used by anthropologists to refer to a:

a. culture within a culture, such as the culture of African Americans
b. culture that has become extinct, but about which enough is known to revive it
c. culture that seeks to dominate others, such as the culture of Nazi Germany
d. culture that is worldwide and pluralistic, sharing universal values

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