![The Future and Frontiers of Culturalized Properties in the Global South](http://s1.studyres.com/store/data/003896125_1-3dd7792f5f211df0f41adbe3dde10169-300x300.png)
The Future and Frontiers of Culturalized Properties in the Global South
... anthropologists have historically understood as the dialectical relationship between property and personhood. 2 Under new forms of neoliberal governmentality, collective attachments to ...
... anthropologists have historically understood as the dialectical relationship between property and personhood. 2 Under new forms of neoliberal governmentality, collective attachments to ...
Creolization in Anthropological Theory and in Mauritius
... One of the more popular concepts used to deal with the increased complexity of the empirical fields now studied by anthropologists, is creolization (Drummond 1980; Hannerz 1992, 1996). Creolization is often used merely as a synonym for mixing or hybridity, but from the discussion below, it will beco ...
... One of the more popular concepts used to deal with the increased complexity of the empirical fields now studied by anthropologists, is creolization (Drummond 1980; Hannerz 1992, 1996). Creolization is often used merely as a synonym for mixing or hybridity, but from the discussion below, it will beco ...
What is Anthropology?
... ethnographic data gathered in different societies to make generalizations about society and culture. • Ethnology uses ethnographic data to build models, test hypotheses, and create theories that enhance our understanding of how social and cultural systems work. • Ethnology works from the particular ...
... ethnographic data gathered in different societies to make generalizations about society and culture. • Ethnology uses ethnographic data to build models, test hypotheses, and create theories that enhance our understanding of how social and cultural systems work. • Ethnology works from the particular ...
chapter - International Institute of Anthropology
... It is difficult for cultural anthropologists to ignore the enormity of the social problems faced on a daily basis by the people with whom they work. ANS: T PG: ...
... It is difficult for cultural anthropologists to ignore the enormity of the social problems faced on a daily basis by the people with whom they work. ANS: T PG: ...
Anthropology in the middle - Anthropology Emory
... As debates grind down with age, however, they are easily reinvented in new guises even as – or more often because – they are forgotten. Amid great differences, to speak telescopically, resonances emerge among perspectives that emphasize the relative, subjective, and defamiliarizing moment of cultura ...
... As debates grind down with age, however, they are easily reinvented in new guises even as – or more often because – they are forgotten. Amid great differences, to speak telescopically, resonances emerge among perspectives that emphasize the relative, subjective, and defamiliarizing moment of cultura ...
Theory of `Revitalization Movement` by Anthony F
... contention and conflict, 5) cultural transformation, and 6) routinization of the new culture system. When this occurs, the revitalization creates a new steady state. Though process is basically the same, revitalizations vary in structure. Revitalizations can seek to revive traditional culture, they ...
... contention and conflict, 5) cultural transformation, and 6) routinization of the new culture system. When this occurs, the revitalization creates a new steady state. Though process is basically the same, revitalizations vary in structure. Revitalizations can seek to revive traditional culture, they ...
Full article - Culture Unbound
... but also in social sciences and cultural research globally. The reasons for the reemergence of border studies can be found in geopolitical changes that initiated in Europe (e.g. the collapse of the Soviet Union and the formation of the EU), in the US-Mexico borderlands, and in the global context of ...
... but also in social sciences and cultural research globally. The reasons for the reemergence of border studies can be found in geopolitical changes that initiated in Europe (e.g. the collapse of the Soviet Union and the formation of the EU), in the US-Mexico borderlands, and in the global context of ...
JEANNE FAVRET-SAADA ABOUT PARTICIPATION Let us begin by
... situations develop without asking questions, and from the first session to the last I hardly understood what was actually going on. But I discreetly recorded about thirty sessions out of the two hundred or so I attended, so as to provide myself with material on which I would be able to work later on ...
... situations develop without asking questions, and from the first session to the last I hardly understood what was actually going on. But I discreetly recorded about thirty sessions out of the two hundred or so I attended, so as to provide myself with material on which I would be able to work later on ...
CALL FOR PAPERS
... Following the crisis of representation a series of virtues have come to mark the practice of anthropology: Empathic, engaged, interpretative, holistic, thick, and deep forms of representation and comprehension. It is against the grain of such virtues that this panel opts to positively engage obstacl ...
... Following the crisis of representation a series of virtues have come to mark the practice of anthropology: Empathic, engaged, interpretative, holistic, thick, and deep forms of representation and comprehension. It is against the grain of such virtues that this panel opts to positively engage obstacl ...
Carola Lentz Culture The making, unmaking and remaking of an
... talk about culture. In 1871, Tylor published his magnum opus under the ambiguous title Primitive Culture, which can be read as meaning both primitive culture and the culture of primitives. In Great Britain, at the time, culture was generally understood as high culture, something that could neither b ...
... talk about culture. In 1871, Tylor published his magnum opus under the ambiguous title Primitive Culture, which can be read as meaning both primitive culture and the culture of primitives. In Great Britain, at the time, culture was generally understood as high culture, something that could neither b ...
Cultural Symbols and Textile Communication
... way enters the thinking that one culture’s symbols should be understood by another, which is a perspective many anthropologists have been working hard to leave behind (Feminias, 1987; Graburn, 1976; Russell, 2007). Looking at textiles as expressing a universal message undermines the intricacies and ...
... way enters the thinking that one culture’s symbols should be understood by another, which is a perspective many anthropologists have been working hard to leave behind (Feminias, 1987; Graburn, 1976; Russell, 2007). Looking at textiles as expressing a universal message undermines the intricacies and ...
On the affective ambivalence of living with cultural diversity
... local mediation. After all, one of its most fundamental characteristics is the naturalizing of the ‘cultural’, namely by passing off local frameworks of evaluation as universally valid (Geertz, 1975). In complex cultures, however, that authority is threatened because there are different variants of ...
... local mediation. After all, one of its most fundamental characteristics is the naturalizing of the ‘cultural’, namely by passing off local frameworks of evaluation as universally valid (Geertz, 1975). In complex cultures, however, that authority is threatened because there are different variants of ...
Download/View PDF (AY)
... [AY248] Anthropological Perspective on Science and Religion Cross-cultural research ranging from ethnographies of in vitro fertilization in Ecuador to religious healing in Madagascar to fetal personhood in the United States introduces students to new cultural perspectives on the relationship of scie ...
... [AY248] Anthropological Perspective on Science and Religion Cross-cultural research ranging from ethnographies of in vitro fertilization in Ecuador to religious healing in Madagascar to fetal personhood in the United States introduces students to new cultural perspectives on the relationship of scie ...
The Rashomon Effect: When Ethnographers Disagree
... PUZZLE:How are we to understand or resolve such disagreements? This article is an attempt to pull together a conceptual framework to deal with the puzzle. As it happens, ethnographers rarely disagree with each other's interpretations of a culture, and when such disagreements do arise they are usuall ...
... PUZZLE:How are we to understand or resolve such disagreements? This article is an attempt to pull together a conceptual framework to deal with the puzzle. As it happens, ethnographers rarely disagree with each other's interpretations of a culture, and when such disagreements do arise they are usuall ...
Chapter 1 What is Biological Anthropology
... 3. From the perspective of biological theory, humans are a. not like all other biological species b. unrelated to primates c. the product of the same long process of adaptation as all other biological species d. much like all other biological species, but did not result from evolutionary processes ( ...
... 3. From the perspective of biological theory, humans are a. not like all other biological species b. unrelated to primates c. the product of the same long process of adaptation as all other biological species d. much like all other biological species, but did not result from evolutionary processes ( ...
culture - WordPress.com
... As this makes clear, Arnold acted as a cultural critic, in other words as a critic of the culture (or cultures) – in the anthropological sense of the term – that prevailed in Britain at the time he lived.8 As I noted earlier, his views have often been seen as elitist, and it is certainly true that h ...
... As this makes clear, Arnold acted as a cultural critic, in other words as a critic of the culture (or cultures) – in the anthropological sense of the term – that prevailed in Britain at the time he lived.8 As I noted earlier, his views have often been seen as elitist, and it is certainly true that h ...
FULL-TEXT - Manchester eScholar
... of the living paradoxes of Ongka’s times, a period that feels familiar to his viewers. Ongka’s reasoning follows from his experience of the confusion of long - established value standards, and speaks to the enduring question of just what the social good is. In such a global world, in which models of ...
... of the living paradoxes of Ongka’s times, a period that feels familiar to his viewers. Ongka’s reasoning follows from his experience of the confusion of long - established value standards, and speaks to the enduring question of just what the social good is. In such a global world, in which models of ...
The impact of militarism on anthropology
... methodologies for the discovery of the history of our discipline that has never before been achieved by anyone in or out of the field—an ethnographic history. Price probably knows more about how to use the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) than anybody in anthropology. He filed hundreds of requests ...
... methodologies for the discovery of the history of our discipline that has never before been achieved by anyone in or out of the field—an ethnographic history. Price probably knows more about how to use the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) than anybody in anthropology. He filed hundreds of requests ...
Anthropology of Everydayness Cultural Theory and Social Practice
... How does anthropology of everydayness relate to the other schools of anthropological research? Complementary theories and methodologies Anthropology of everydayness is not only anthropography but also attempts to deconstruct the visible and the invisible elements of the everydayness in order t ...
... How does anthropology of everydayness relate to the other schools of anthropological research? Complementary theories and methodologies Anthropology of everydayness is not only anthropography but also attempts to deconstruct the visible and the invisible elements of the everydayness in order t ...
Communicating with Transculturation
... would only use it in his sense and always acknowledge its paternity. Coronil points out that only very few anthropologists, literary critics and exponents of cultural studies have so far been willing to seriously address Ortiz’ book. Amid those studies that have injected the concept of «transcultura ...
... would only use it in his sense and always acknowledge its paternity. Coronil points out that only very few anthropologists, literary critics and exponents of cultural studies have so far been willing to seriously address Ortiz’ book. Amid those studies that have injected the concept of «transcultura ...
Negotiating feelings in the field: Analyzing the Cultural
... visitor even begins to help others who may be new to the situation. In the fourth stage, the visitor ‘accepts the customs of the country as just another way of living’ (ibid). Certainly, the visitor will not always understand what is occurring in social situations and may not notice nuances, but he ...
... visitor even begins to help others who may be new to the situation. In the fourth stage, the visitor ‘accepts the customs of the country as just another way of living’ (ibid). Certainly, the visitor will not always understand what is occurring in social situations and may not notice nuances, but he ...
Not Knowing about Defecation
... magic, forbidden pract.ices, covert conflicts, secret societies, and nocturnal rituals are some of the unobservable popular topics in ethnography. Yet defecation, one of the most concealed activities, has never been on the short list of anthropological favorites. A third reason to be interested in d ...
... magic, forbidden pract.ices, covert conflicts, secret societies, and nocturnal rituals are some of the unobservable popular topics in ethnography. Yet defecation, one of the most concealed activities, has never been on the short list of anthropological favorites. A third reason to be interested in d ...
The Contract with God: Patterns of Cultural Consensus across Two
... ethnographic work: that a set of characteristics called culture is meaningfully shared and distributed among members of a group. Critiques of the method, some of which were famously highlighted in a debate between Robert Aunger (1999) and A. Kimball Romney (1999), focus on how cultural consensus por ...
... ethnographic work: that a set of characteristics called culture is meaningfully shared and distributed among members of a group. Critiques of the method, some of which were famously highlighted in a debate between Robert Aunger (1999) and A. Kimball Romney (1999), focus on how cultural consensus por ...
Department of Anthropology and Tribal Development Guru
... stands for moral, spiritual and intellectual attainments of man. In Hindi, the term Sanskriti (culture) has been taken from Sanskrit language. The first anthropologist who gave the scientific definition of culture was E. B. Tylor who defined culture in his book, ’Primitive Culture’ as “Culture is th ...
... stands for moral, spiritual and intellectual attainments of man. In Hindi, the term Sanskriti (culture) has been taken from Sanskrit language. The first anthropologist who gave the scientific definition of culture was E. B. Tylor who defined culture in his book, ’Primitive Culture’ as “Culture is th ...