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100

The comparative perspective in anthropology involves: 



What is comparing cultural systems to highlight differences and challenge assumptions of what is "natural."

100

The study of what makes us human 



What is anthropology

100

An unpleasant, even traumatic, feeling people get when the rules and understandings by which they have organized their lives no longer apply



What is culture shock

200

The holistic perspective in anthropology emphasizes: 



What is the understanding of human societies as complex systems with interconnected elements that cannot be studied separately.



200

Most definitions of culture rely on this idea



What is a socially shred set of common symbols, learned as being a part of that society

200

Anthropology reminds us that International Studies is truly about 



What are people

300

The empirical perspective relies on: 



What is data and direct observation



300

The process by which members of a community pass on culture to new generations



What is enculturation

300

Ways that diffusion of ideas occur: 



What is direct and indirect contact

400

Three words used to describe culture



What are symbolic, shared, learned



400

We aren’t born with culture but we can learn it through



What is informal learning, embodiment, formal learning

400

Understanding culture is crucial to understanding



What is human behavior

500

A level of everyday practices, an underlying level of reasons and logical explanations for these practices, underlying assumptions about how the world works



What are the levels of culture

500

Some groups resist joining the “melting pot” because of this

What is wanting to preserve their culture’s own unique characteristics 



500

The flows of symbols across the global landscape, facilitated by transnational migration, new information technologies, global markets, which can lead to creativity and innovation but also to misunderstanding and conflict describe



What is intercultural relations