Wednesday, May 29, 2019

Interrelation of Physical and Social Characteristics in Society :: Anthropology

Interrelation of Physical and Social Characteristics in SocietyCultures on this planet are infinitely diverse and quite antithetical from each other as well. Many of the customs and rituals that are practiced in the United States are diverse in nature as well, scarce are similar in more ways to each other than to cultures in other regions of the world. It seems that a great deal of a cultures core stems from their surrounding environment, and the pressures that this puts on those trying to live there. A cultures physical and social characteristics are interrelated, and play an authoritative role in the development of a society and the personalities of the people.Marriage, jobs, and politics are all areas of a culture that are influenced by a persons environment. In the U.S., monogamy is the normal structure of marriage, and is a logic choice considering the type of environment we live in. Independence training is emphasized to prepare people for obtaining the highest standard of life story in the U.S. Being better than another is important in this society, and is stressed to most people from a very early age. Living away from mavins parents is not only expected notwithstanding also often desired by both the child and the parents. Mobility is a huge factor in the work force, and the less one is tied down to, the easier it is to declare the necessary transitions. In other societies, forms of marriage other than monogamy make more sense, and make life easier. For example, the Kung San live together in small groups, in which everyone takes care of all the children, and much of life is not privately shielded from the group. Their openness and share-out of childcare and lifestyles is also portrayed in their food gathering activities. The villagers gather food and then distribute it to not only their own nuclear family, but to others as well. It would be too hard to survive on your own in this environment, so the group structure works well.Inheritanc e of lands and goods also plays an important role in the structuring of societies and families in other cultures outside of the U.S. Cultures such as the Inuit, Tibetans, and Marquesan Islanders of Polynesia, practice polyandry, the marriage of more than one man to a single woman. This is third estate for brothers who do not wish to divide up their fathers lands, so they will marry the same woman and both retain the wide-cut estate.

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