A) rapid gathering of available material and key interviews.
B) rapid assessment of local conditions and detailed interviews.
C) observing many participants over a long period of time.
D) collecting only material goods that were considered trash.
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Multiple Choice
A) reflexive perspective.
B) clear sense of who holds power.
C) understanding of local values.
D) opportunity to become an insider.
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Multiple Choice
A) A careful reexamination of Malinowski's work in the Trobriand Islands.
B) A methodical analysis of social life among the Nuer of Africa.
C) An examination of effects of British colonialism in Puerto Rico.
D) An analysis of how British colonialism altered the idea of exchange in the kula ring economy.
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Multiple Choice
A) an excess of funding sources for a narrow range of interests
B) the "weaponizing of anthropology"
C) the "militarization of anthropology"
D) recruitment of anthropologists as fighting soldiers
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Multiple Choice
A) allows the anthropologist to identify key informants.
B) documents the randomness of the built environment.
C) provides a deep immersion in the rhythms of daily life.
D) illuminates how use of space influences social interactions.
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Multiple Choice
A) Twentieth-century anthropologists' research focused on kinship and religion, whereas nineteenth-century anthropologists were more interested in economics and politics.
B) Whereas twentieth-century anthropologists took a four-field approach to understanding culture, nineteenth-century anthropologists were mostly interested in material culture.
C) Nineteenth-century anthropologists were mostly interested in present-day cultures and evolutionary processes that may have created them, but twentieth-century anthropologists were interested in the processes by which cultures changed.
D) Nineteenth-century anthropologists conducted long-term fieldwork, but twentieth-century anthropologists tended to rely on explorers' accounts.
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Multiple Choice
A) All of the poor must be given an equal voice, and publishing ethnographic research is the most useful way to accomplish this.
B) The researcher obtained informed consent and ensured the anonymity of the subjects.
C) The anthropologist must publish the results to help stop undocumented immigration.
D) The anthropologist will violate the "do no harm" mandate unless the research is published.
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Multiple Choice
A) anonymizing names in publications, but continuing to use subjects' real names in research notes.
B) using the real names of communities, but not those of the people living there.
C) altering details when writing about sensitive topics within a community.
D) referring to individuals in both research notes and publications using secret codes.
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Multiple Choice
A) The poor are a vulnerable population and are often exploited.
B) The poor are a reliable source of organs for wealthy patients.
C) The poor have many children, and are thus a rich resource.
D) The poor do not draw the attention of the local authorities.
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Multiple Choice
A) etic
B) polyvocal
C) thick description
D) emic
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Multiple Choice
A) Nancy Scheper-Hughes's notion of volunteerism and activism
B) Margaret Mead's emphasis on dynamic writing
C) Franz Boas's notion of cultural relativism
D) E.E. Evans-Pritchard's synchronic approach
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Multiple Choice
A) precise qualitative evaluation
B) a form of exploitation
C) an art
D) intrusive
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Multiple Choice
A) Clearly document the kinship system of the people being studied.
B) Take time to learn the local language of the people being studied.
C) Carefully document the geographical setting of the people being studied.
D) Conduct in-depth analysis of a culture from an armchair.
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Multiple Choice
A) participant observation
B) archival research
C) engaged anthropology
D) synchronic study
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Essay
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Multiple Choice
A) the importance of accurate notes in the field
B) the crucial need for different types of anthropologists today
C) how the type of ethnographic writing affects the published results
D) the reality that all anthropological inquiry is a form of interpretation
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Multiple Choice
A) early biological models.
B) modern philosophical debates.
C) turn-of-the-century demographic trends.
D) late nineteenth-century globalization.
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Multiple Choice
A) experimental
B) engaged
C) reflexive
D) medical
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Multiple Choice
A) He conducted a restudy of the Trobriand Islands.
B) Morgan researched social life among the Nuer of Africa.
C) He and his team studied the effects of colonialism in Puerto Rico.
D) Morgan conducted fieldwork to become an expert on Native Americans.
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Multiple Choice
A) Anti-colonialist ideas spurred a debate in the 1900s about the role of anthropology in protecting indigenous groups.
B) The loss of life during the Human Terrain Systems Program was made public and provoked outrage among the anthropological community.
C) An increasing awareness of loss of Amazonian rain forest populations evoked a worldwide outcry.
D) Ethical and moral lapses toward the end of the twentieth century led to changes in attitude about the role of the anthropologist.
Correct Answer
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