Values - West Branch Local Schools
... Believe it or not our values even affect the purchases we make. ...
... Believe it or not our values even affect the purchases we make. ...
Anthropology and Me
... • Family and parental wishes should always be more important than personal desires or needs. All of the above beliefs are from specific cultures that we will examine in this chapter. They are all examples of cultural beliefs. People know this information to be true because it is true for all or mos ...
... • Family and parental wishes should always be more important than personal desires or needs. All of the above beliefs are from specific cultures that we will examine in this chapter. They are all examples of cultural beliefs. People know this information to be true because it is true for all or mos ...
Communicating with Transculturation
... processes of adopting alien cultural elements into their own culture and of transferring to cultural others elements of theirs, dawned on me during my fieldwork, first, with the Ngaing of Papua New Guinea and, second, with the Banabans of Fiji. Their respective conceptualizations are present, and as ...
... processes of adopting alien cultural elements into their own culture and of transferring to cultural others elements of theirs, dawned on me during my fieldwork, first, with the Ngaing of Papua New Guinea and, second, with the Banabans of Fiji. Their respective conceptualizations are present, and as ...
Pdf of unpublished English language version.
... substantive economic shift over recent decades, noting the ‘extent to which culture has penetrated the economy itself, that is, the extent to which symbolic processes… have permeated both consumption and production’. The result, they suggest, is the ‘effective de-differentiation of culture and econ ...
... substantive economic shift over recent decades, noting the ‘extent to which culture has penetrated the economy itself, that is, the extent to which symbolic processes… have permeated both consumption and production’. The result, they suggest, is the ‘effective de-differentiation of culture and econ ...
Chapter II Roots of Ecocriticism The study of literature
... ecology is one of the most discussed issues today. It is the concern of every country to replenish the diminishing factors of ecology which threatens human beings the most. Literature well known for reflecting the contemporary issues could not have remained unaffected from this theme. The world of ...
... ecology is one of the most discussed issues today. It is the concern of every country to replenish the diminishing factors of ecology which threatens human beings the most. Literature well known for reflecting the contemporary issues could not have remained unaffected from this theme. The world of ...
Interdisciplinary research on musical timbre
... Musicology: Alternative structure A specifically theory, analysis, composition, musical performance humanities history, cultural studies, philosophy ...
... Musicology: Alternative structure A specifically theory, analysis, composition, musical performance humanities history, cultural studies, philosophy ...
The Unbalanced Reciprocity between Cultural Studies and
... its expansion in the United States, but feminism as an intellectual movement in universities, I believe, had an earlier and more strongly cultivated interdisciplinary identity of its own, and consequently scholarship done in its name (as in anthropology) has been much less likely to conceive of itse ...
... its expansion in the United States, but feminism as an intellectual movement in universities, I believe, had an earlier and more strongly cultivated interdisciplinary identity of its own, and consequently scholarship done in its name (as in anthropology) has been much less likely to conceive of itse ...
Cultures of Learning or Learning of Cultures
... A range of conceptual tools are on offer to help us investigate the social world within this theory of practice, which also claims to be a theory-as-method. They include habitus and field: the former, a durable but transposable set of dispositions, representing the physical and mental embodiment of ...
... A range of conceptual tools are on offer to help us investigate the social world within this theory of practice, which also claims to be a theory-as-method. They include habitus and field: the former, a durable but transposable set of dispositions, representing the physical and mental embodiment of ...
RTF version - Graduate School of Education
... generative schemes which operate by orienting social practice. This, in a nutshell, is Bourdieu’s theory of practice. Practice, the dynamic of which is probably better captured by the word praxis, is a cognitive operation; it is structured and tends to reproduce structures of which it is a product. ...
... generative schemes which operate by orienting social practice. This, in a nutshell, is Bourdieu’s theory of practice. Practice, the dynamic of which is probably better captured by the word praxis, is a cognitive operation; it is structured and tends to reproduce structures of which it is a product. ...
Cultures of Learning or Learning of Cultures
... generative schemes which operate by orienting social practice. This, in a nutshell, is Bourdieu’s theory of practice. Practice, the dynamic of which is probably better captured by the word praxis, is a cognitive operation; it is structured and tends to reproduce structures of which it is a product. ...
... generative schemes which operate by orienting social practice. This, in a nutshell, is Bourdieu’s theory of practice. Practice, the dynamic of which is probably better captured by the word praxis, is a cognitive operation; it is structured and tends to reproduce structures of which it is a product. ...
Elements of Culturally Competent Counseling
... through the last half of the 20th century. This can be characterized as a period of great change in American society that was spurred by a fundamental questioning of the nature of social exclusion for many groups of people. Groups that had been historically marginalized and oppressed began to demand ...
... through the last half of the 20th century. This can be characterized as a period of great change in American society that was spurred by a fundamental questioning of the nature of social exclusion for many groups of people. Groups that had been historically marginalized and oppressed began to demand ...
Power Point Notes
... Dominant Values in the U.S. A dominant culture is the group whose values prevail within a society. Cultural differences refer to values, practices, and rituals that vary from those of the dominant culture. The dominant culture of the U.S. is composed of white, middle-class Protestants of Europea ...
... Dominant Values in the U.S. A dominant culture is the group whose values prevail within a society. Cultural differences refer to values, practices, and rituals that vary from those of the dominant culture. The dominant culture of the U.S. is composed of white, middle-class Protestants of Europea ...
Metaphors
... High Morality is Up, Penthouses are Up, Productivity is UP. Therefore, the phrase ‘smart high income earners are moral, productive, and live happily ever after in penthouses’ appears to make sense, i.e. it has coherence. Conversely, the phrase ‘stupid low-income earners are lazy, live in basement su ...
... High Morality is Up, Penthouses are Up, Productivity is UP. Therefore, the phrase ‘smart high income earners are moral, productive, and live happily ever after in penthouses’ appears to make sense, i.e. it has coherence. Conversely, the phrase ‘stupid low-income earners are lazy, live in basement su ...
Epistemological Bias in the Physical and Social Sciences
... theoretical practice that relies on empirical results and is supported by a general critical approach is preferable. Western schools of thought confirmed that human beings are by nature worldly (secular) and place physical self-interest above any other consideration. This viewpoint emphasizes techno ...
... theoretical practice that relies on empirical results and is supported by a general critical approach is preferable. Western schools of thought confirmed that human beings are by nature worldly (secular) and place physical self-interest above any other consideration. This viewpoint emphasizes techno ...
24 Does Culture Evolve?
... there were ‘‘higher’’ and ‘‘lower’’ stages of human culture, an implication that seemed built into any evolutionary theory, could not survive its political consequences, and so by 1980 cultural anthropology once again returned to its Boasian model of cultural change, cultural differentiation, and cu ...
... there were ‘‘higher’’ and ‘‘lower’’ stages of human culture, an implication that seemed built into any evolutionary theory, could not survive its political consequences, and so by 1980 cultural anthropology once again returned to its Boasian model of cultural change, cultural differentiation, and cu ...
Anthropological Theory and Intelligence
... sponsored anthropological work on intelligence analysis (Johnston 2005). However, as noted above, the military services are chiefly concerned with acquiring valuable “cultural intelligence” and fostering “cross-cultural competence” (“3C”) that will transform military personnel into culturally savvy ...
... sponsored anthropological work on intelligence analysis (Johnston 2005). However, as noted above, the military services are chiefly concerned with acquiring valuable “cultural intelligence” and fostering “cross-cultural competence” (“3C”) that will transform military personnel into culturally savvy ...
ii - Forskning
... The background of the paper is a long experience of collaboration with Chinese colleagues and doctoral students on researcher training in the field of lifelong learning. The point of departure for this work was concrete academic interest in exchange between research groups within similar research ar ...
... The background of the paper is a long experience of collaboration with Chinese colleagues and doctoral students on researcher training in the field of lifelong learning. The point of departure for this work was concrete academic interest in exchange between research groups within similar research ar ...
Ethnographic Cognition and Writing Culture1
... 1982; Wilson 1970) and from a methodological point of view by those authoring research guides on anthropological methods. Spencer (2000) shows how the community of British anthropologists defines anthropology during the course of events such as research seminars. This shows that the reflexive attit ...
... 1982; Wilson 1970) and from a methodological point of view by those authoring research guides on anthropological methods. Spencer (2000) shows how the community of British anthropologists defines anthropology during the course of events such as research seminars. This shows that the reflexive attit ...
Needs and Wants _ Encyclopedia of Consumer Culture
... The theoretical arguments previously presented were particularly relevant during the second half of the twentieth century. These critical points of view of contemporary consumer culture have, however, been challenged by a group of authors who focused mainly on examining how some contemporary mass-pr ...
... The theoretical arguments previously presented were particularly relevant during the second half of the twentieth century. These critical points of view of contemporary consumer culture have, however, been challenged by a group of authors who focused mainly on examining how some contemporary mass-pr ...
Microsoft Word - UWE Research Repository
... There is a substantive body of work dealing with the impact of the media on a range of highrisk behaviours and health-related issues. While this work highlights the undeniable influence of the media on these behaviours and practices, there is a tendency to identify causal links between ill-defined a ...
... There is a substantive body of work dealing with the impact of the media on a range of highrisk behaviours and health-related issues. While this work highlights the undeniable influence of the media on these behaviours and practices, there is a tendency to identify causal links between ill-defined a ...
The Anthropological Questions
... Social organization System of symbols By examining the four parts of culture, anthropologists seek answers to the fundamental questions of social change. ...
... Social organization System of symbols By examining the four parts of culture, anthropologists seek answers to the fundamental questions of social change. ...
Review of Course Numbers
... humanity over the last 5 million years. Specific topics include (but are not limited to) the origins of plant and animal domestication, the genesis of cities and urbanism, and the political and ecological consequences of human impact on the natural environment. Introduction to the paleontology of hu ...
... humanity over the last 5 million years. Specific topics include (but are not limited to) the origins of plant and animal domestication, the genesis of cities and urbanism, and the political and ecological consequences of human impact on the natural environment. Introduction to the paleontology of hu ...
Culture and Visual Forms of Power
... This is interpreted as power-over relations, and it is defined in terms of its actual exercise by the formation of the “multilinear ensemble” (Deleuze 1992) of discourses, belief systems and hegemonies that characterize its dispositiv (1978). Similarly, he is not interested in finding out those in ...
... This is interpreted as power-over relations, and it is defined in terms of its actual exercise by the formation of the “multilinear ensemble” (Deleuze 1992) of discourses, belief systems and hegemonies that characterize its dispositiv (1978). Similarly, he is not interested in finding out those in ...
Cultural Politics and Policy in Britain Since the 1960s
... other community artists, the term’s definitional looseness has been viewed less as a constriction and more as a strategic opportunity—so Anne Cahill (1998) in the context of community music in Australia has sought to uncover and exploit any “advantage in the fuzziness” of definitions of “community” ...
... other community artists, the term’s definitional looseness has been viewed less as a constriction and more as a strategic opportunity—so Anne Cahill (1998) in the context of community music in Australia has sought to uncover and exploit any “advantage in the fuzziness” of definitions of “community” ...
Bayan Nila: Pilipino Culture Nights and Student Performance at
... held Southern Philippine artistic forms in high regard because they symbolized an unconquered Philippine people (Gaerlan 1999, 271). The practice of appropriating Southern Philippine music was taken further by the dance troupe, Bayanihan, and its practices subsequently defined the ways that the musi ...
... held Southern Philippine artistic forms in high regard because they symbolized an unconquered Philippine people (Gaerlan 1999, 271). The practice of appropriating Southern Philippine music was taken further by the dance troupe, Bayanihan, and its practices subsequently defined the ways that the musi ...