DOC format - Experimental Collaborations
... anthropological knowledge in ethnography. Both an empirical practice and disciplinary narrative, we know that nowadays fieldwork is not what it used to be —or maybe it has never been what the canon narrates—. The solitary confined research practice of ethnography has given way to collaborative proje ...
... anthropological knowledge in ethnography. Both an empirical practice and disciplinary narrative, we know that nowadays fieldwork is not what it used to be —or maybe it has never been what the canon narrates—. The solitary confined research practice of ethnography has given way to collaborative proje ...
HAU HAU
... I see anthropology as one of the major players in today‟s intellectual landscape, and precisely to the extent that it has decided to engage directly in a conceptually determining way with classic so-called philosophical problems, rather than being forced to express those problems unreflectively and ...
... I see anthropology as one of the major players in today‟s intellectual landscape, and precisely to the extent that it has decided to engage directly in a conceptually determining way with classic so-called philosophical problems, rather than being forced to express those problems unreflectively and ...
Checklist of courses
... IWU Anthropology Program Course Checklist MAJOR SEQUENCE - A minimum of ten course units to include: 1. Each of the following five courses: _____ 160 Human Origins (LSI) _____ 171 Introduction to Cultural Anthropology (SI, G) _____ 310 Issues and Ethnography in Anthropology (W, G) _____ 330 Language ...
... IWU Anthropology Program Course Checklist MAJOR SEQUENCE - A minimum of ten course units to include: 1. Each of the following five courses: _____ 160 Human Origins (LSI) _____ 171 Introduction to Cultural Anthropology (SI, G) _____ 310 Issues and Ethnography in Anthropology (W, G) _____ 330 Language ...
Policy Ethics and Student Research
... “vulnerable!populations,”!is!important!work!and!may!be!suitable!study!populations! for!more!experienced!researchers,!but!still!inappropriate!for!novice!researchers.! Therefore,!students!are!discouraged!strongly!from!conducting!research!with! “vulnerable!populations,”!as!set!out!in!the!following!exce ...
... “vulnerable!populations,”!is!important!work!and!may!be!suitable!study!populations! for!more!experienced!researchers,!but!still!inappropriate!for!novice!researchers.! Therefore,!students!are!discouraged!strongly!from!conducting!research!with! “vulnerable!populations,”!as!set!out!in!the!following!exce ...
Cultural Anthropology`s big names
... • Provided a classic definition of culture that is still valid • Key theorist in the anthropology of religion ...
... • Provided a classic definition of culture that is still valid • Key theorist in the anthropology of religion ...
what is anthropology?
... • Anthropologists do not just observe – We actively participate, but are not like the other ...
... • Anthropologists do not just observe – We actively participate, but are not like the other ...
2. The ethnography of speaking and the structure of conversation
... The study of language must deal with the ‘real’ texts that form human communication and the social situations they are used in. The speech event is constituted by seven distinct factors, each associated with a different function: - speaker / writer, - hearer / reader, - message form (passed between ...
... The study of language must deal with the ‘real’ texts that form human communication and the social situations they are used in. The speech event is constituted by seven distinct factors, each associated with a different function: - speaker / writer, - hearer / reader, - message form (passed between ...
The Politics, and Ethics of Ethnographic Inquiry
... fieldwork: • History of fieldwork in anthropology 1. Participant observation: A. Explicit: Recorded or formal B. Tacit: personal experience personal belief ...
... fieldwork: • History of fieldwork in anthropology 1. Participant observation: A. Explicit: Recorded or formal B. Tacit: personal experience personal belief ...
Syllabus - Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies
... duplicated. Your questions may address issues raised by a single, or multiple, readings. You can also pose a question about something in the readings that you did not understand or would like clarification on. The key idea here is that these questions should provoke further exploration and reflectio ...
... duplicated. Your questions may address issues raised by a single, or multiple, readings. You can also pose a question about something in the readings that you did not understand or would like clarification on. The key idea here is that these questions should provoke further exploration and reflectio ...
MAY 2013 SOCIAL ANTHROPOLOGY SA1002
... Are animals good to think or good to eat? Discuss in relation to the work of at least two anthropologists. ...
... Are animals good to think or good to eat? Discuss in relation to the work of at least two anthropologists. ...
Reflexivity does not belong to an individual or cultural vacuum but to
... • to examine a field problem (machismo, gender relations, etc) • to examine anthropology itself (critique of our methods, history, theories) • as a tool for gathering data (technique of inquiry) • to publicly examine the anthropologist's response to the field situation (by exposing the methodology) ...
... • to examine a field problem (machismo, gender relations, etc) • to examine anthropology itself (critique of our methods, history, theories) • as a tool for gathering data (technique of inquiry) • to publicly examine the anthropologist's response to the field situation (by exposing the methodology) ...
Anthropology and ethnography
... − yet lots of evidence suggests that this is not actually true − a fairly limited number of families provide a disproportionate number of the politicians that run the country − people born into some ethnic or economic groups have much lower incomes, poorer health, etc. than people born into others − ...
... − yet lots of evidence suggests that this is not actually true − a fairly limited number of families provide a disproportionate number of the politicians that run the country − people born into some ethnic or economic groups have much lower incomes, poorer health, etc. than people born into others − ...
cultural concepts
... cultures to show how groups live in different physical, economic, and social environments, and to show how members give meaning to their lives. ...
... cultures to show how groups live in different physical, economic, and social environments, and to show how members give meaning to their lives. ...
Nanda 3e PPTs Chapter 3
... Went further than Boas in developing research methods in cultural anthropology Polish citizen-Over a year on Trobriand Islands- WWI Study of the Kula Ring Set new standards for fieldwork- opening chapter had guidelines for fieldwork ...
... Went further than Boas in developing research methods in cultural anthropology Polish citizen-Over a year on Trobriand Islands- WWI Study of the Kula Ring Set new standards for fieldwork- opening chapter had guidelines for fieldwork ...
Society, Social Roles and Institutions
... modernization. • Especially difficult to categorize societies today in a globalized world. ...
... modernization. • Especially difficult to categorize societies today in a globalized world. ...
Emergent Forms of Life in Corporate Arenas.
... so . Ethnographic knowledges emerge in process (not as fixed end points), shi ing from perspective to perspective, from communication circuit to circuit, highlighting the frictions and unintended transductions across circuits. Microso , thanks to Douglas Coupland (1994) and others, is already a rich ...
... so . Ethnographic knowledges emerge in process (not as fixed end points), shi ing from perspective to perspective, from communication circuit to circuit, highlighting the frictions and unintended transductions across circuits. Microso , thanks to Douglas Coupland (1994) and others, is already a rich ...
Fieldwork and Ethnography
... Type of knowledge – intersubjective A self consciousness about the impact on the data produced in the context of doing fieldwork and writing culture how the anthropologist effects the thoughts, actions of informants how the ethnocentrism of the anthro colors the interpretation and final representati ...
... Type of knowledge – intersubjective A self consciousness about the impact on the data produced in the context of doing fieldwork and writing culture how the anthropologist effects the thoughts, actions of informants how the ethnocentrism of the anthro colors the interpretation and final representati ...
PowerPoint - GEOCITIES.ws
... Interviewing allows the researcher to find out WHY things are done Interviewing allows the researcher to find out what things MEAN. Interviews can be structured, where the researcher asks for specific information. Interviews can be unstructured, where the researcher encourages the speaker to talk ab ...
... Interviewing allows the researcher to find out WHY things are done Interviewing allows the researcher to find out what things MEAN. Interviews can be structured, where the researcher asks for specific information. Interviews can be unstructured, where the researcher encourages the speaker to talk ab ...
here - CSCW 2012
... Science, Technology and Society Revisited: What is Happening to Anthropology and Ethnography? ...
... Science, Technology and Society Revisited: What is Happening to Anthropology and Ethnography? ...
A PORTRAIT OF ANTHROPOLOGY AS A YOUNG DISCIPLINE
... phers reflect upon their own experiences? 7) What ultimately makes one ethnography better than another? Denzin identifies an even more destabilizing set: Who is the subject? Does the subject have direct access to his or her lived experiences? Is there a layer of lived experience as good as any other ...
... phers reflect upon their own experiences? 7) What ultimately makes one ethnography better than another? Denzin identifies an even more destabilizing set: Who is the subject? Does the subject have direct access to his or her lived experiences? Is there a layer of lived experience as good as any other ...
What is anthropology?
... without the permission or knowledge of the subjects under study • Doing Harm to a person or subject under study • Violating Ethical principles of the society or culture under study or the society or culture of the anthropologist ...
... without the permission or knowledge of the subjects under study • Doing Harm to a person or subject under study • Violating Ethical principles of the society or culture under study or the society or culture of the anthropologist ...
Ethical issues in cultural anthropology
... • Accountable: Answerable, being required to answer for one's actions. Sometimes the term "accountable" is used with a moral connotation ("normatively" ) meaning morally required to answer for one's actions without specifying to whom one is accountable. More often "accountable" is used descriptively ...
... • Accountable: Answerable, being required to answer for one's actions. Sometimes the term "accountable" is used with a moral connotation ("normatively" ) meaning morally required to answer for one's actions without specifying to whom one is accountable. More often "accountable" is used descriptively ...
Subfields of Anthropology
... of sociology, by contrast, has traditionally focused on the complex industrial societies of the West. While these distinctions are rapidly breaking down in a changing world, anthropologists still tend to be characterized by a special interest in peoples who are different from those of Western indust ...
... of sociology, by contrast, has traditionally focused on the complex industrial societies of the West. While these distinctions are rapidly breaking down in a changing world, anthropologists still tend to be characterized by a special interest in peoples who are different from those of Western indust ...
Symposium: Ethnography of everyday life
... that true? Often, we rather seem to focus our attention on very dramatic and distressing issues – and understandably so, because we want to be relevant to contemporary society. But this shift towards grim actuality – which begins already in teaching and in the topics that students choose for their m ...
... that true? Often, we rather seem to focus our attention on very dramatic and distressing issues – and understandably so, because we want to be relevant to contemporary society. But this shift towards grim actuality – which begins already in teaching and in the topics that students choose for their m ...