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Anthropological%20Theories%20About%20Social%20Change

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Anthropological Theories About Social Change Cause of Social Change: The San of Southern Africa Read article in small groups answer the questions #1-3 Respond ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Anthropological%20Theories%20About%20Social%20Change


1
Anthropological Theories About Social Change
2
Cause of Social Change
3
The San of Southern Africa
4
Read article in small groups answer the questions
1-3
Minds on activity
  • Respond Discuss as a class

5
Theory of Cultural Change
  • All the cultural changes that were forced on the
    San came from INTERACTION (contact with other
    cultures).
  • most anthropologists believe that the most
    far-reaching cultural changes come from contact
    with other cultures.
  • In many cases, as seen in the San, cultures do
    not want to accept change but are forced to do so
    by more powerful cultures.

6
The Gods Are CrazyCultural Comparison
  • http///watch?voeeIuC77NVM
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vk1Kj4T4wsdMNR1
  • San Tribe Kalahwww.youtube.comari Desert, 1980

7
How can cultures adapt and change?
8
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9
Anthropologies have classified forces that
influences cultures to adapt and change
  1. Diffusion
  2. Acculturation (two forms incorporation and
    directed Change)
  3. Cultural evolution

10
How can cultures adapt and change?
  • 1) Diffusion occurs when one culture borrows
    cultural symbols from another.
  • Smoking tobacco is
  • originally a North
  • American product
  • learned from
  • aboriginals
  • that Europeans
  • brought to
  • Africa.

11
  • 2. Acculturation results from prolonged contact
    between two cultures during which time they
    interchange symbols, beliefs and customs. This
    can happen in two ways.
  • Two forms
  • Incorporation
  • Directed Change

12
  • A) Incorporation when people freely borrow
    selected elements from one culture (ie. Canoe)

13
  • B) Directed Change when one culture defeats or
    otherwise controls another and forces it to
    changes aspects of its culture.

14
  • 3) Cultural Evolution cultures evolve according
    to common patterns. They move from
    hunter-gathering cultures to industrialized
    states in predictable stages.

15
Acculturation
  • Example of Direct Change

16
  • Residential Schools
  • Belief
  • In the 19th century, the Canadian government
    believed aboriginal peoples were primitive
    cultures and it was the states responsible to
    educating and caring for the country's aboriginal
    people.
  • Aboriginals had to assimilate to Canadian culture
    and their best chance for success was to learn
    English and adopt Christianity and Canadian
    customs.
  • Ideally, aboriginals would pass their adopted
    lifestyle on to their children, and native
    traditions would diminish, or be completely
    abolished in a few generations.
  • Implementation
  • The Canadian government developed a policy called
    "aggressive assimilation" to be taught at
    church-run, government-funded industrial schools,
    later called residential schools.
  • The government felt children were easier to mould
    than adults, and the concept of a boarding school
    was the best way to prepare them for life in
    mainstream society.

17
A look at Canadian Aboriginals
  • St. Joseph Residential School, also known as the
    Crowfoot School (Alberta 1890). The Canadian
    government made Aboriginal cultures change by
    forcing Aboriginal children into residential
    schools.

18
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19
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20
  • Results
  • From 19Th century to 1996 (which was when the
    last school closed) over 150,000 native children
    were removed from their communities and forced to
    attend school.

21
  • Thinking questions
  • In what ways could this change Aboriginal
    culture?
  • How is this an example of directed change?
  • How is racism involved?

22
  • Though the Catholic church oversaw three-quarters
    of Canadian residential schools, it was the last
    church to have one of its leaders officially
    address the abuse.
  • On April 29, 2009, Pope Benedict XVI expressed
    his "sorrow" to a delegation from Canada's
    Assembly of First Nations for the abuse and
    "deplorable" treatment that aboriginal students
    suffered at Roman Catholic Church-run residential
    schools.
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