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acculturation

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acclimatization

acclimatization  

1 The progressive adaptation of an organism to any change in its natural environment that subjects it to physiological stress. See also acclimation.2 The overall sum of processes by which an organism ...
Acculturation

Acculturation   Reference library

The Oxford Encyclopedia of African Thought

Reference type:
Subject Reference
Current Version:
2010
Subject:
History, Regional and National History, Philosophy
Length:
1,218 words

The acculturation model of social change is viewed as a significant development in both anthropological and African thought, although it

acculturation

acculturation   Quick reference

The Oxford Dictionary of Sports Science & Medicine (3 ed.)

Reference type:
Subject Reference
Current Version:
2007
1 A process occurring when different cultural groups are in contact. Acculturation leads to the acquisition of new cultural patterns by one or more of the groups, with the ... More
Acculturation

Acculturation   Reference library

The Oxford Encyclopedia of Mesoamerican Cultures

Reference type:
Subject Reference
Current Version:
2006
Subject:
History, Regional and National History
Length:
1,735 words

Anthropologists have traditionally conceptualized cultural change as originating within or outside sociocultural systems, a rough dichotomy that classes internal change

Acculturation

Acculturation   Reference library

Encyclopedia of African American History, 1619–1895: From the Colonial Period to the Age of Frederick Douglass

Reference type:
Subject Reference
Current Version:
2009
Subject:
History, Regional and National History
Length:
1,466 words

The acculturation of newly arrived enslaved Africans to the New World involved the interaction between Europeans and Africans. In this

acculturation difficulty

acculturation difficulty  

Any problem of acculturation that falls short of being an adjustment disorder.
assimilation

assimilation  

[Ge]The absorption of a minority group into a majority population, during which the group takes on the values and norms of the dominant culture.
Cultural Interaction

Cultural Interaction  

Mesoamerica's cultural unity is the product of contacts maintained among its constituent societies for more than ten millennia. A review of this length cannot do justice to the complex cultural ...
culture

culture  

The way of life of a people, including their attitudes, values, beliefs, arts, sciences, modes of perception, and habits of thought and activity. Cultural features of forms of life are learned but ...
diffusion

diffusion  

Reference type:
Overview Page
Subject:
Archaeology
[Th]The spread of ideas, items of material culture, or cultural traits from one culture or society to another. Diffusion does not necessarily imply a movement of people, for ideas can move through ...
immigrant

immigrant  

A person who migrates to and settles in a country other than that of birthplace and upbringing. Immigrants often differ culturally and sometimes in health-related behavior from persons born and ...
Melville J. Herskovits

Melville J. Herskovits  

Reference type:
Overview Page
(1895 –1963)One of the leading American figures in African anthropology and later in the study of African-American culture. Herskovits's abiding interests were the patterns and processes of ...
Ralph Linton

Ralph Linton  

Reference type:
Overview Page
(1893–1953)An American cultural anthropologist who undertook fieldwork on the Polynesians. Later, he attempted to develop a systematic cultural science, focusing especially on the relationships ...
Romanization

Romanization  

Reference type:
Overview Page
[Ge]For Francis Haverfield, writing in the early 20th century, Romanization was a historical process involving a material change to native cultures brought about by a strong Roman presence that ...
syncretism

syncretism  

Reference type:
Overview Page
Subject:
Religion
The attempt to combine opposing doctrines and practices, especially in reference to philosophical and religious systems. The term came into prominence in the 17th cent. when it was applied to the ...
transculturation

transculturation  

In the foreword to his sixteenth-century book The True History of the Conquest of New Spain, Bernal Díaz del Castillo promises to describe the encounter of Spaniards and Mesoamericans “plainly ...

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