Curriculum Vitae
... August 1993 to Present: Principal Investigator. Escondida Research Group, LLC, Santa Fe, New Mexico. Principal Investigator: Patricia Walker (505) 466-3572. RECOGNITION and HONORS 1990 thru 1991: UNM Lewis R. Binford Graduate Fellowship / $7000 per year. 1990: Nominated to the Phi Kappa Phi Honor So ...
... August 1993 to Present: Principal Investigator. Escondida Research Group, LLC, Santa Fe, New Mexico. Principal Investigator: Patricia Walker (505) 466-3572. RECOGNITION and HONORS 1990 thru 1991: UNM Lewis R. Binford Graduate Fellowship / $7000 per year. 1990: Nominated to the Phi Kappa Phi Honor So ...
An Archaeology of Landscapes: Perspectives and
... productive landscape research draws from complementary theoretical perspectives. Landscape approaches allow researchers to accommodate, if not integrate, different theoretical perspectives even while these constructs exist in tension with one another. Through this characteristic, an explicitly defin ...
... productive landscape research draws from complementary theoretical perspectives. Landscape approaches allow researchers to accommodate, if not integrate, different theoretical perspectives even while these constructs exist in tension with one another. Through this characteristic, an explicitly defin ...
The impact of militarism on anthropology
... for anthropologists both at Berkeley and Harvard, although in different ways. Graduate work at Harvard University was where I became aware of the search for communist infiltrators and spies and the banning of communists from the teaching professions. It was the 1950s and the awareness of the militar ...
... for anthropologists both at Berkeley and Harvard, although in different ways. Graduate work at Harvard University was where I became aware of the search for communist infiltrators and spies and the banning of communists from the teaching professions. It was the 1950s and the awareness of the militar ...
Cultural Transmission Theory and the Archaeological Record
... takes place. The lack of attention in this area leads to fairly simplistic notions of traits moving from individual to individual with frequencies that are driven only by their prevalence in the population. In GT, it has become clear that genes cannot always be treated as independent traits. Such mo ...
... takes place. The lack of attention in this area leads to fairly simplistic notions of traits moving from individual to individual with frequencies that are driven only by their prevalence in the population. In GT, it has become clear that genes cannot always be treated as independent traits. Such mo ...
Anthropological Views of Play
... posing a system of objects, techniques, social alignments, and customs, ideas and attitudes—a composite of interrelated parts which exert mutual influence on one another. Thus, the study of play entails the examination of social structure and social customs, technology and economy, and ideas, values ...
... posing a system of objects, techniques, social alignments, and customs, ideas and attitudes—a composite of interrelated parts which exert mutual influence on one another. Thus, the study of play entails the examination of social structure and social customs, technology and economy, and ideas, values ...
Vocabulary prehistory archaeology artifact ritual hominid capabilities
... Test your vocabulary skills • A definition will appear on the screen. • See if you can identify which vocabulary word it defines. • Keep track of the definitions you know. • You will need to review those that you miss in order to pass the Early Hominid Test ...
... Test your vocabulary skills • A definition will appear on the screen. • See if you can identify which vocabulary word it defines. • Keep track of the definitions you know. • You will need to review those that you miss in order to pass the Early Hominid Test ...
anthropology - California State University, Bakersfield
... skills to the analysis and interpretation of results in light of their connections to other phenomena already known. Objectives: A. Ability to engage phenomena of the outside world from a scientific perspective through the formulation of theoretically appropriate research questions, collection of da ...
... skills to the analysis and interpretation of results in light of their connections to other phenomena already known. Objectives: A. Ability to engage phenomena of the outside world from a scientific perspective through the formulation of theoretically appropriate research questions, collection of da ...
Consensus, Community, and Exoticism
... chiefs, however, look forward to the receipt, and temporary ownership, of legendary, named valuables which circulate in perpetuity, while their owners are quickly replaced. In all three cases the earthly order of things is permanent, and is suffused with a sense of the importance of etiquette for th ...
... chiefs, however, look forward to the receipt, and temporary ownership, of legendary, named valuables which circulate in perpetuity, while their owners are quickly replaced. In all three cases the earthly order of things is permanent, and is suffused with a sense of the importance of etiquette for th ...
History and Theory in Anthropology - Assets
... national traditions and schools of thought, and the impact of individuals and the new perspectives they have introduced to the discipline. I have ended up with what I believe is a unique but eclectic approach, and the one which makes best sense of anthropological theory in all its variety. My goal i ...
... national traditions and schools of thought, and the impact of individuals and the new perspectives they have introduced to the discipline. I have ended up with what I believe is a unique but eclectic approach, and the one which makes best sense of anthropological theory in all its variety. My goal i ...
Chapter 4 - A Science of Human Nature?
... horse, the newborn offspring knows what plants to eat immediately after birth and does not need to learn this. Similarly, it instinctively knows who its mother is. It has even been suggested, with a good deal of evidence, that animals such as baboons know in some way the genetic kinship links that e ...
... horse, the newborn offspring knows what plants to eat immediately after birth and does not need to learn this. Similarly, it instinctively knows who its mother is. It has even been suggested, with a good deal of evidence, that animals such as baboons know in some way the genetic kinship links that e ...
Publication in Anthropology - UNC
... can be made then “translated” into administrative standards, hopefully enriching those standards in the process. (This is happening to a degree already, for example, in a recent reversal of a negative tenure decision when a performative venue was accepted by a chancellor-level committee as a substit ...
... can be made then “translated” into administrative standards, hopefully enriching those standards in the process. (This is happening to a degree already, for example, in a recent reversal of a negative tenure decision when a performative venue was accepted by a chancellor-level committee as a substit ...
Session Abstracts - Society for American Archaeology
... Woodlands, zooarchaeologists from multiple institutions are exploring the integration of Archaic faunal datasets that have been collected and analyzed over the last half century. As a first step in this research these zooarchaeologists, who have formed the Eastern Archaic Faunal Working Group (EAFWG ...
... Woodlands, zooarchaeologists from multiple institutions are exploring the integration of Archaic faunal datasets that have been collected and analyzed over the last half century. As a first step in this research these zooarchaeologists, who have formed the Eastern Archaic Faunal Working Group (EAFWG ...
1 - faculty.fairfield.edu
... What are the four examples of anthropology? Give one example/method for each. What are the three goals/objectives of this course? What does the term ‘asabiya mean? Who came up with the terms ‘asabiya and ‘umran? Discuss 3 of the six origins of the study of anthropology. Do some of these ideas and th ...
... What are the four examples of anthropology? Give one example/method for each. What are the three goals/objectives of this course? What does the term ‘asabiya mean? Who came up with the terms ‘asabiya and ‘umran? Discuss 3 of the six origins of the study of anthropology. Do some of these ideas and th ...
Innovation in Cultural Systems
... or process, whereas innovation represents the first attempt to put it into practice, which may occur considerably later. Moreover, innovation may be seen not as a “one-off” but as a continuing accumulation of changes (see chapter 9, this volume). Barnett (1953: 7–8), on the other hand, claims to be ...
... or process, whereas innovation represents the first attempt to put it into practice, which may occur considerably later. Moreover, innovation may be seen not as a “one-off” but as a continuing accumulation of changes (see chapter 9, this volume). Barnett (1953: 7–8), on the other hand, claims to be ...
BACHELOR OF ARTS IN ANTHROPOLOGY UNDERGRADUATE
... method and theory to the needs of society. Our department is particularly strong in the areas of cultural anthropology, archaeology, museum anthropology, and applied anthropology. However, there are courses available in other subfields and all majors are required to take an introductory-level course ...
... method and theory to the needs of society. Our department is particularly strong in the areas of cultural anthropology, archaeology, museum anthropology, and applied anthropology. However, there are courses available in other subfields and all majors are required to take an introductory-level course ...
Summary
... conducted in 2012 with young Kashubs (aged 16-25). The research carried out has combined a cultural (anthropological) and a sociolinguistic viewpoints. The language policy not only concerns important bottom-down acts and laws established by the state and by minority activists, but is also based on p ...
... conducted in 2012 with young Kashubs (aged 16-25). The research carried out has combined a cultural (anthropological) and a sociolinguistic viewpoints. The language policy not only concerns important bottom-down acts and laws established by the state and by minority activists, but is also based on p ...
What is Anthropology?
... increasingly important for human groups. • Human groups have devised diverse ways of coping with a wide range of environments. • The rate of this cultural adaptation has been rapidly accelerating during the last 10,000 years. – Food production developed between 12,000 and 10,000 years ago after mill ...
... increasingly important for human groups. • Human groups have devised diverse ways of coping with a wide range of environments. • The rate of this cultural adaptation has been rapidly accelerating during the last 10,000 years. – Food production developed between 12,000 and 10,000 years ago after mill ...
Design Anthropology Is Not, and Cannot Be, Ethnography
... opposite of totalisation. Far from piecing all the parts together into a single whole, in which everything is ‘joined up’, it seeks to show how within every moment of social life is enfolded an entire history of relations of which it is the transitory outcome. Anthropology is comparative because it ...
... opposite of totalisation. Far from piecing all the parts together into a single whole, in which everything is ‘joined up’, it seeks to show how within every moment of social life is enfolded an entire history of relations of which it is the transitory outcome. Anthropology is comparative because it ...
David Vine Associate Professor Department of Anthropology
... York taxpayers for the tens of thousands of dollars you invested in my education. (If I can make a small public anthropological plug for investing in public education, for those of us lucky enough to have received doctoral funding and who now have tenure track jobs and some degree of financial secur ...
... York taxpayers for the tens of thousands of dollars you invested in my education. (If I can make a small public anthropological plug for investing in public education, for those of us lucky enough to have received doctoral funding and who now have tenure track jobs and some degree of financial secur ...
Chapter 2 More than Metaphor: Approaching the
... can be found more generally in throughout Western thought, as a divide between mind and nature and culture and nature (Franklin 2002:180). To this was often added a more or less explicitly imposed hierarchy where mind and culture dominate and control body and nature, a paradigm that was used to just ...
... can be found more generally in throughout Western thought, as a divide between mind and nature and culture and nature (Franklin 2002:180). To this was often added a more or less explicitly imposed hierarchy where mind and culture dominate and control body and nature, a paradigm that was used to just ...
The Interpretation of Cultures: Selected Essays
... Chapter I / Thick Description: Toward an Interpretive Theory of Culture I In her book, Philosophy in a New Key, Susanne Langer remarks that certain ideas burst upon the intellectual landscape with a tremendous force. They resolve so many fundamental problems at once that they seem also to promise th ...
... Chapter I / Thick Description: Toward an Interpretive Theory of Culture I In her book, Philosophy in a New Key, Susanne Langer remarks that certain ideas burst upon the intellectual landscape with a tremendous force. They resolve so many fundamental problems at once that they seem also to promise th ...
Bonvillain chapter 1
... Anthropologists collect data about behavior and beliefs in many societies to document the diversity of human culture and to understand common patterns in how people adapt to their environments, adjust to their neighbors, and develop unique cultural institutions. This comparative perspective can chal ...
... Anthropologists collect data about behavior and beliefs in many societies to document the diversity of human culture and to understand common patterns in how people adapt to their environments, adjust to their neighbors, and develop unique cultural institutions. This comparative perspective can chal ...
MArt Anthropology with Innovation ILO
... A3. Different methodologies and theoretical approaches to studying human societies. A4. Specific regions of the world from an anthropological perspective. A5. The social, historical, and environmental context of cultural modes of thought and behaviour. ...
... A3. Different methodologies and theoretical approaches to studying human societies. A4. Specific regions of the world from an anthropological perspective. A5. The social, historical, and environmental context of cultural modes of thought and behaviour. ...
- SlideBoom
... • Social and Cultural Anthropologists are especially interested in the qualitative study of meaning. What do people think, feel and believe? Why do they think, feel and believe those things? How do their thoughts, feelings and beliefs influence their behavior? ...
... • Social and Cultural Anthropologists are especially interested in the qualitative study of meaning. What do people think, feel and believe? Why do they think, feel and believe those things? How do their thoughts, feelings and beliefs influence their behavior? ...
Submitted by (Name, affiliation, E-Mail)
... 2009 we collected information about where visual anthropology is taught in Europe. The result you can find here: http://www.easaonline.org/networks/vaneasa/teaching.shtml At the website of VANEASA we will publish basic information which does not change too often. Actual information should be found a ...
... 2009 we collected information about where visual anthropology is taught in Europe. The result you can find here: http://www.easaonline.org/networks/vaneasa/teaching.shtml At the website of VANEASA we will publish basic information which does not change too often. Actual information should be found a ...