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Title: Chapter Outline


1
Chapter Outline
  • Adaptation
  • Modes of Subsistence
  • Subsistence and Economic
  • Distribution and Exchange
  • Economics, Culture, and the World of Business

2
Culture Adaptation
  • A peoples cultural adaptation consists of a
    complex of ideas, activities, and technologies
    that enable them to survive and thrive.
  • The process of adaptation establishes an ever
    shifting balance between the needs of a
    population and its environment.

3
Ecosystem
  • Defined as a system composed of the natural
    environment and organisms living within it.
  • The system is bound by the activities of the
    organisms, as well as by such physical processes
    as erosion and evaporation.

4
Cultural Ecology
  • A term that refers to the dynamic interaction of
    specific cultures with their natural environments.

5
Cultural Evolution
  • Human groups adapt to their environments by means
    of their cultures.
  • Culture evolution is the change of cultures over
    the course of time.
  • Progress is the notion that humans are moving
    forward to a better, more advanced stage in their
    development toward perfection.

6
Parallel Evolution
  • In parallel evolution, the development of similar
    cultural adaptations to similar environmental
    conditions by peoples whose ancestral cultures
    were already somewhat alike.

7
Convergent Evolution
Agriculture in Tibet
Urumbamba valley agriculture in Peru
  • In convergent evolution, the development of
    similar cultural adaptations to similar
    environmental conditions by different peoples
    with different ancestral cultures.

8
Food-Foraging
  • The oldest type of human adaptation.
  • Requires that people move their residence
    according to changing food sources.
  • Local group size is kept small.
  • The carrying capacity of the land is the number
    of people that the available resources can
    support at a given level of food-getting
    techniques.

9
Neolithic Revolution
  • Domestication of plants and animals by peoples
    with stone-based technologies, beginning about
    10,000 years ago and leading to radical
    transformations in cultural systems.
  • Led to radical transformations in cultural
    systems with foragers developing new social and
    economic patterns based either on plant
    cultivation or pastoralism.

10
Pastoralism
  • A means of subsistence that relies on raising and
    managing herds of domesticated migratory grazing
    animals, such as cattle, sheep, and goats.
  • Pastoralists are usually nomadic, moving as
    needed to provide animals with pasture and water.
  • Transhumance is a strategy in which people move
    grazing animals from winter pastures in low
    steppe lands to summer pastures on high plateaus.

11
Crop Cultivation Horticulture
  • When small communities of gardeners work with
    simple hand tools, using neither irrigation nor
    the plow.
  • One widespread forms of horticulture is swidden
    farming (slash-and-burn).
  • An form of horticulture in which the natural
    vegetation is cut, the slash is burned, and crops
    are planted among the ashes.

12
Crop Cultivation Agriculture
  • Crop cultivation that involves using technologies
    other than hand tools, such as irrigation,
    fertilizers, and the wooden or metal plow pulled
    by harnessed draft animals.
  • Agriculturalists are able to grow surplus
    foodproviding not only for their own needs but
    for those of various full-time specialists and
    nonproducing consumers as well.

13
Industrialization
  • The industrial revolution began 200 years ago
    with the invention of the steam engine.
  • It replaced human labor and hand tools with
    machines and resulted in massive culture change
    in many societies.

14
Subsistence and Economics
  • An economic system is an organizational
    arrangement for producing, distributing, and
    consuming goods.
  • In every society, customs and rules govern the
    kinds of work done, who does the work, attitudes
    toward the work, how it is accomplished, and who
    controls the resources.
  • The primary resources in a culture are raw
    materials, technology, and labor.

15
Technology Resources
  • The number and kinds of tools a society uses,
    together with knowledge about how to make and use
    them constitute its technology.
  • Food foragers and pastoral nomads who are
    frequently on the move are apt to have fewer and
    simpler tools than more settled peoples such as
    sedentary farmers.

16
Land Resources
  • All societies regulate the allocation of land and
    other valuable resources.
  • In nonindustrial societies, individual ownership
    of land is rare generally land is controlled by
    kinship groups, such as the lineage or band.

17
Technology
  • The tools people use is related to their mode of
    subsistence.
  • Food foragers and pastoral nomads who are
    frequently on the move are apt to have fewer and
    simpler tools than more settled peoples such as
    sedentary farmers.

18
Labor Resources and Patterns
  • In addition to raw materials and technology,
    labor is a key resource in any economic system.
  • Two features are almost always present in human
    cultures a basic division of labor by gender and
    by age.

19
Division of Labor
  • The division of labor is commonly governed by
    rules according to gender and age.
  • Whether men or women do a particular job varies
    from group to group, but typically work is
    divided into the tasks of either one or the other.

20
Flexible/Integrated Division of Labor
  • Most common often among food foragers and
    subsistence farmers.
  • Men and women perform up to 35 of activities
    with equal participation.
  • Boys and girls learn to value cooperation over
    competition.
  • Adult men and women interact with each other on a
    relatively equal basis.

21
Segregated Pattern Division of Labor
  • Societies in this pattern define almost all work
    as either masculine or feminine, so men and women
    rarely engage in joint efforts.
  • This pattern is frequently seen in pastoral
    nomadic, intensive agricultural, and industrial
    societies, where mens work keeps them outside
    the home for much of the time.

22
Dual Sex Configuration Division of Labor
  • In this pattern, men and women carry out their
    work separately, as in societies segregated by
    gender, but the relationship between them is one
    of balanced complementarity rather than
    inequality.
  • Although competition is a prevailing ethic, each
    gender manages its own affairs, and the interests
    of both men and women are represented at all
    levels.

23
Division of Labor by Age
  • Division of labor according to age is typical of
    human societies.
  • In traditional farming societies, children and
    older people make a greater contribution to the
    economy in terms of work than in industrial or
    postindustrial societies.
  • In industrial societies, where poor families
    depend on every possible contribution to the
    household, children often work.

24
Cooperative Labor
  • Cooperative work groups can be found in every
    type of society.
  • If the effort involves the whole community, a
    festive spirit permeates the work.

25
Reciprocity
  • A transaction between two parties whereby goods
    and services of roughly equivalent value are
    exchanged.

26
Types of Reciprocity
  • Generalized - The value of the gift is not
    calculated, nor is time of repayment specified.
  • Balanced reciprocity - Giving and receiving are
    specific as to the value of goods and the time of
    their delivery.
  • Negative reciprocity - The aim is to get
    something for as little as possible and may
    involve hard bargaining, manipulation, cheating,
    and theft.

27
Barter and Trade
  • Barter is a form of reciprocity by which scarce
    items from one group are exchanged for desirable
    goods from another group.
  • Although each party seeks to get the best deal,
    both may negotiate until a balance has been found
    and each feels satisfied.

28
The Kula Ring
  • Balanced reciprocity that reinforces trade
    relations among a group of seafaring Melanesians
    inhabiting a ring of islands off the eastern
    coast of Papua New Guinea.
  • Participants are influential men who travel
    within the Trobriand ring to exchange prestige
    items (red shell necklaces) which are circulated
    clockwise around the islands and white shell
    armbands (mwali), which are carried in the
    opposite direction.

29
The Kula Ring
30
Redistribution
  • A form of exchange in which goods flow into a
    central place where they are sorted and
    reallocated.
  • Three motives in redistribution
  • Gain a position of power through a display of
    wealth and generosity.
  • Assure those who support the leadership an
    adequate standard of living.
  • Establish alliances with leaders of other groups.

31
Conspicuous Consumption
  • Display of wealth for social prestige.
  • Potlatch
  • On the northwest coast of North America, a
    ceremonial event in which a village chief
    publicly gives away stock-piled food and other
    goods that signify wealth.

32
Prestige Economy
  • Creation of a surplus for the express purpose of
    gaining prestige through a public display of
    wealth that is given away as gifts.

33
Leveling Mechanism
  • A cultural obligation compelling prosperous
    members of a community to give away goods, host
    public feasts, provide free service, or otherwise
    demonstrate generosity so that no one permanently
    accumulates more wealth than anyone else.

34
Market Exchange
  • To an economist, market exchange has to do with
    the buying and selling of goods and services,
    with prices set by rules of supply and demand.
  • Personal loyalties and moral values are not
    supposed to play a role, but they often do.

35
Money
  • Something used to make payments for goods and
    services and to measure their value.
  • Its attributes are durability, portability,
    divisibility, recognizability, and fungibility
    (exchangeable for any other monetary item of the
    same value).
  • Items used as money include salt, shells, stones,
    beads, feathers, fur, bones, teeth, and metals,
    from iron to gold and silver.

36
Informal Economy
  • A network of producing and circulating marketable
    commodities, labor, and services that for various
    reasons escape government control (enumeration,
    regulation, or other type of public monitoring or
    auditing).
  • May encompass a range of activities, including
    gardening, house cleaning, child care, doing
    repair or construction, lending money, picking
    pockets, and gambling.
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