6 - Rlsms.com
... examine the ways in which different cultures have influenced families and communities (compare the role and status of women in China, India, the Islamic World, Europe, and the Pre-Columbian Americas) 6.6.1 The student exhibits no major errors or omissions. Level 2.5 ...
... examine the ways in which different cultures have influenced families and communities (compare the role and status of women in China, India, the Islamic World, Europe, and the Pre-Columbian Americas) 6.6.1 The student exhibits no major errors or omissions. Level 2.5 ...
Post-Processual Archaeology and After
... archaeology may skip the rest of this section and take the point simply that it is controversial. Post-processual archaeology is not the result of a paradigm shift in the discipline, a revolution from one kind of science to another. No new normal science (with a new orthodoxy of method and research ...
... archaeology may skip the rest of this section and take the point simply that it is controversial. Post-processual archaeology is not the result of a paradigm shift in the discipline, a revolution from one kind of science to another. No new normal science (with a new orthodoxy of method and research ...
Theorizing Dreaming and the Self
... How does dreaming, cross-culturally considered, reflect on prior theories of the self? Take, for example, George Herbert Mead’s (1934) idea that the self is composed of an “I” and a “me.” Mead’s “I” is the individual who feels, desires, wills, and acts. The “me” is the presence of social others with ...
... How does dreaming, cross-culturally considered, reflect on prior theories of the self? Take, for example, George Herbert Mead’s (1934) idea that the self is composed of an “I” and a “me.” Mead’s “I” is the individual who feels, desires, wills, and acts. The “me” is the presence of social others with ...
The importance non-verbal communication in diagnostic
... to a more intense and open exploratory interview. It is important that the developing processes of verbal and non-verbal communication between the assessor and client do not affect the validity of the prognosis. (Meier-Faust, 2001; Undeutsch, 1983). Jäger & Petermann (1995) thus regard the quality o ...
... to a more intense and open exploratory interview. It is important that the developing processes of verbal and non-verbal communication between the assessor and client do not affect the validity of the prognosis. (Meier-Faust, 2001; Undeutsch, 1983). Jäger & Petermann (1995) thus regard the quality o ...
this PDF file - Student Journals @ McMaster University
... grasp that "nation-ness, as well as nationalism, are cultural artefacts of a particular kind" (1983: 13, emphasis added). With this statement, Anderson places nations and nationalism firmly within the conceptual tenitory of anthropologists. Unlike Gellner (1983) and Hobsbawm (1990, 1997), Anderson a ...
... grasp that "nation-ness, as well as nationalism, are cultural artefacts of a particular kind" (1983: 13, emphasis added). With this statement, Anderson places nations and nationalism firmly within the conceptual tenitory of anthropologists. Unlike Gellner (1983) and Hobsbawm (1990, 1997), Anderson a ...
Analysing Discourse. An Approach From the Sociology
... men's, or collective actors strategic actions or plans. They are see as unintended (power) effects of heterogeneous practices performed by social actors trying to solve concrete problems of everyday routine. ...
... men's, or collective actors strategic actions or plans. They are see as unintended (power) effects of heterogeneous practices performed by social actors trying to solve concrete problems of everyday routine. ...
Using CMM - Pearce Associates
... management of meaning." Of course, tones of voice are often more informative than the verbal content of what is said, and struggle and frustration were expressed in the tones of voice in which "CMM" was first said. For years, I had been trying to bring together what I was learning from social scienc ...
... management of meaning." Of course, tones of voice are often more informative than the verbal content of what is said, and struggle and frustration were expressed in the tones of voice in which "CMM" was first said. For years, I had been trying to bring together what I was learning from social scienc ...
Preliminary Program 2015 (updated 2/5/15)
... CINTRON-MOSCOSO, Federico (Ctr for Landscape Conservation) Citizen Participation and Natural Resource Management in Colonial Caribbean: The Case of El Yunque National Forest, Puerto Rico OSKARSSON, Patrik (U Gothenburg) No Strings Attached?: The Indian Coal Mining Expansion and Community Rights at H ...
... CINTRON-MOSCOSO, Federico (Ctr for Landscape Conservation) Citizen Participation and Natural Resource Management in Colonial Caribbean: The Case of El Yunque National Forest, Puerto Rico OSKARSSON, Patrik (U Gothenburg) No Strings Attached?: The Indian Coal Mining Expansion and Community Rights at H ...
Do you two know each other? Transitivity, homophily
... associate and bond with similar others— has received rich support in research by social psychologists, sociologists, and anthropologists. Similar people are physically attracted to one another (Buss & Barnes, 1986; Watson et al., 2004), tend to communicate more often (Newcomb, 1961), and are even li ...
... associate and bond with similar others— has received rich support in research by social psychologists, sociologists, and anthropologists. Similar people are physically attracted to one another (Buss & Barnes, 1986; Watson et al., 2004), tend to communicate more often (Newcomb, 1961), and are even li ...
Anthropological perspectives of infanticide
... given the very ambiguous nature of associated parental behaviors. The evidence of "selective neglect" is largely circumstantial, anecdotal or second-hand (Bugos and McCarthy 1984; De Meer 1988; Nations and Rebhun 1988; Scheper-Hughes 1984). The main body of evidence may be differential gender mortal ...
... given the very ambiguous nature of associated parental behaviors. The evidence of "selective neglect" is largely circumstantial, anecdotal or second-hand (Bugos and McCarthy 1984; De Meer 1988; Nations and Rebhun 1988; Scheper-Hughes 1984). The main body of evidence may be differential gender mortal ...
“extended stay” and “back-and
... and disciplinary assumptions, which have intersected and diverged from one another in complex ways throughout the 20th century. Taking into consideration the complex histories and unequal power relations among different anthropological traditions, this article focuses on the grounds on which world a ...
... and disciplinary assumptions, which have intersected and diverged from one another in complex ways throughout the 20th century. Taking into consideration the complex histories and unequal power relations among different anthropological traditions, this article focuses on the grounds on which world a ...
The Mickey Mouse Kachina and Other "Double Objects"
... implies a re-working of previously existing elements rather than any simple combination of two (or more) distinct cultural forms (Bhabha 1994:110). This transformation often challenges presumptive norms—assumptions about what is Indigenous and what is colonial, for example. It also underscores the p ...
... implies a re-working of previously existing elements rather than any simple combination of two (or more) distinct cultural forms (Bhabha 1994:110). This transformation often challenges presumptive norms—assumptions about what is Indigenous and what is colonial, for example. It also underscores the p ...
Aalborg Universitet Representations from the past Sammut, Gordon; Tsirogianni, Stavroula; Wagoner, Brady
... dimension. Bartlett (1923, pp. 12–13) argues that, “It is only if we interpret individual to mean pre-social that we can take psychology to be prehistoric. The truth is that there are some individual responses which simply do not occur outside a social group”. Following Halbwachs, Bartlett refers to ...
... dimension. Bartlett (1923, pp. 12–13) argues that, “It is only if we interpret individual to mean pre-social that we can take psychology to be prehistoric. The truth is that there are some individual responses which simply do not occur outside a social group”. Following Halbwachs, Bartlett refers to ...
Social and Cultural Anthropology: The Key Concepts
... consciousness, reflection, intention, purpose and meaning. He felt that social science should be an interpretive study of the meanings of human action and the choices behind them. G.H.Mead sought to clarify the Weberian notion of meaning, and its social-scientific understanding (Verstehung), by diff ...
... consciousness, reflection, intention, purpose and meaning. He felt that social science should be an interpretive study of the meanings of human action and the choices behind them. G.H.Mead sought to clarify the Weberian notion of meaning, and its social-scientific understanding (Verstehung), by diff ...
Visiting Cultures: A Critique of Tourism and Anthropology Jessica Carew Kraft
... Heritage tourism is a successful strategy of urban development. It is also a mechanism for communities to understand their local and national culture. Pelourinho' s market conveys much more than commercial benefit because it provides the context for Afro-Brazilians to rediscover and invent their cul ...
... Heritage tourism is a successful strategy of urban development. It is also a mechanism for communities to understand their local and national culture. Pelourinho' s market conveys much more than commercial benefit because it provides the context for Afro-Brazilians to rediscover and invent their cul ...
Between Several Worlds: Images of Youth and Age in
... Youth and Age in Tuareg Imagery Young people make up a significant segment of the population in Africa. Yet "youth" itself, as well as the apparently opposed category of "elderly," are indexical categories that include people of diverse ages. In this essay I proceed from the premise that youth canno ...
... Youth and Age in Tuareg Imagery Young people make up a significant segment of the population in Africa. Yet "youth" itself, as well as the apparently opposed category of "elderly," are indexical categories that include people of diverse ages. In this essay I proceed from the premise that youth canno ...
Department of Anthropology - Ithaca College Catalog 2016-2017
... The curriculum encompasses four levels of knowledge, critical thinking, and experience: • Level-1 courses introduce the various subfields of anthropology, including archaeology and cultural and biological anthropology. • Level-2 courses acquaint students with the diversity of the world’s present and ...
... The curriculum encompasses four levels of knowledge, critical thinking, and experience: • Level-1 courses introduce the various subfields of anthropology, including archaeology and cultural and biological anthropology. • Level-2 courses acquaint students with the diversity of the world’s present and ...
Introduction to Qualitative Research
... The interpretive or interpretivist model and descriptive research have their roots in philosophy and the human sciences, particularly in history, philosophy and anthropology. The methodology centres on the way in which human beings make sense of their subjective reality and attach meaning to it. Soc ...
... The interpretive or interpretivist model and descriptive research have their roots in philosophy and the human sciences, particularly in history, philosophy and anthropology. The methodology centres on the way in which human beings make sense of their subjective reality and attach meaning to it. Soc ...
... This module surveys the history of various cinema technologies. Particular attention will be given to the ways in which the emergence of new technologies - such as sound, colour, cameras and camera mounts, varying screen dimensions, and lighting systems - affect aesthetic issues in global cinemas. B ...
To the Full Undergraduate Handbook, Click Here
... sufficient guide to cultural difference and divergence. As world population continues to increase, travel and migration have become common experience, and cultural communities are intermingling, though cultural history still conditions our thinking. To live in the modern world requires knowledge of ...
... sufficient guide to cultural difference and divergence. As world population continues to increase, travel and migration have become common experience, and cultural communities are intermingling, though cultural history still conditions our thinking. To live in the modern world requires knowledge of ...
(2009) 223-233 PAUL G. HIEBERT`S LEGACY OF WORLDVIEW A
... One of the most significant components of Hiebert's legacy is his concluding discussion on transforming worldviews. He grounds his understanding of transformation in the biblical language of conversion, which, he notes, includes both an initial turning from sin (repenting) and the process of walking ...
... One of the most significant components of Hiebert's legacy is his concluding discussion on transforming worldviews. He grounds his understanding of transformation in the biblical language of conversion, which, he notes, includes both an initial turning from sin (repenting) and the process of walking ...
Document
... would be one that was comprehensive and unambiguous, and which made it possible to distinguish statements which were true by definition (given the assumptions which define the field of interest) from those which were true as a matter of fact. Gellner writes that he is unsure whether the notion of id ...
... would be one that was comprehensive and unambiguous, and which made it possible to distinguish statements which were true by definition (given the assumptions which define the field of interest) from those which were true as a matter of fact. Gellner writes that he is unsure whether the notion of id ...
Decolonizing Post-Colonial Studies and Paradigms of Political
... studies? Can we move beyond economic reductionism and culturalism? How can we overcome the Eurocentric modernity without throwing away the best of modernity as many Third World fundamentalists do? In this paper, I propose that an epistemic perspective from the subaltern side of the colonial differen ...
... studies? Can we move beyond economic reductionism and culturalism? How can we overcome the Eurocentric modernity without throwing away the best of modernity as many Third World fundamentalists do? In this paper, I propose that an epistemic perspective from the subaltern side of the colonial differen ...
Decolonizing Post-Colonial Studies and Paradigms of Political
... studies? Can we move beyond economic reductionism and culturalism? How can we overcome the Eurocentric modernity without throwing away the best of modernity as many Third World fundamentalists do? In this paper, I propose that an epistemic perspective from the subaltern side of the colonial differen ...
... studies? Can we move beyond economic reductionism and culturalism? How can we overcome the Eurocentric modernity without throwing away the best of modernity as many Third World fundamentalists do? In this paper, I propose that an epistemic perspective from the subaltern side of the colonial differen ...
test-gca-erickson-t1.pdf
... technology, labor, and natural resources to produce and distribute goods and services. To the extent that economizing takes place-that is, minimizing costs and maximizing benefits-it always takes place in a definite cultural context, and it is always embedded in institutional relationships such as k ...
... technology, labor, and natural resources to produce and distribute goods and services. To the extent that economizing takes place-that is, minimizing costs and maximizing benefits-it always takes place in a definite cultural context, and it is always embedded in institutional relationships such as k ...
Intercultural competence
Intercultural competence is the ability to communicate effectively and appropriately with people of other cultures: Appropriately. Valued rules, norms, and expectations of the relationship are not violated significantly. Effectively. Valued goals or rewards (relative to costs and alternatives) are accomplished.In interactions with people from foreign cultures, a person who is interculturally competent understands the culture-specific concepts of perception, thinking, feeling, and acting.Intercultural competence is also called ""cross-cultural competence"" (3C).