* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download anthropology - B
Political economy in anthropology wikipedia , lookup
Human variability wikipedia , lookup
Social Bonding and Nurture Kinship wikipedia , lookup
Ethnography wikipedia , lookup
Post-processual archaeology wikipedia , lookup
Culture-historical archaeology wikipedia , lookup
Dual inheritance theory wikipedia , lookup
Cultural relativism wikipedia , lookup
Social anthropology wikipedia , lookup
Evolutionary archaeology wikipedia , lookup
Popular culture studies wikipedia , lookup
American anthropology wikipedia , lookup
Cultural ecology wikipedia , lookup
Cross-cultural differences in decision-making wikipedia , lookup
Ethnoscience wikipedia , lookup
• Focus on study of humans and all aspects of being human • Different from other social sciences in time and scope –Key concepts enable the difference • Society • Culture • Holistic perspective • Ethnocentrism • Cultural relativism • Shared geographical territory • People living in organized groups with social roles and statuses • Social relations between individuals and groups • interdependence • Language • Making a Living & Economic System • Social Organization, Kinship, Descent, and Marriage • Political Organization; Culture Change • Religion; Arts • Concepts of Illness and Disease • Enculturation –Culture is learned and transmitted from one generation to another •What is important to know to act as a member? –Shaped by keep cultural values and behavioral patterns • Culture as an integrated whole –All parts of culture are interconnected • No part of culture can be studied in isolation • Studying culture involves studying the cultural models people have learned • Key Question: Why does this behavior/emotion make sense in this culture? • Arrangement of Furniture in USA reflects core cultural value of individualism • Individual bedrooms reflect value on individualism & consistent with an economy where families are dependent on individual wage earners • Cultural data is drawn from throughout the world and from throughout human history • Collect data about behavior and beliefs in many societies in order to understand the diversity of human behavior and emotions • Understand common patterns in ways people adapt to their environment, adjust to their neighbors, and develop cultural institutions • Archaeology • Physical Anthropology • Anthropological Linguistics • Cultural Anthropology • Study of past cultures –Prehistoric & historic • Relay on evidence (artifacts) from material culture and the sites where people lived • Evidence reveals how people lived as well as relationships between groups • Study of language and the speakers’ use of language • Relationship between language and other cultural aspects –Culture is learned through language • Biological Anthropology • Study of Human origins (evolution) and contemporary Human variation • Primate social organization • Interface between biology and culture –Example-Andes greater lung capacity adaptation to low oxygen • “Race” is always a social not a biological concept • Conventional Classification of “Race” is pseudoscience • Hair texture, skin color and facial characteristics are arbitrary and randomly selected • Skin tone is function of evolutionary adaptation to climate • Solves problems • Preserves cultural integrity of groups • Relies on cultural group for information about desirable solutions • Bridges cultural and biological anthropology disciplines • Studies susceptibilities and resistance of various populations to disease • Studies health care delivery system • Analyzes human remains for law enforcement and disaster victims’ families • Investigates human rights abuses and genocide • Manages cultural resources • Intended to preserve and protect historic structures and prehistoric sites • Use of archaeology to assess potential impact of construction on a site • The ways people organize their living in societies • The study of cultural behavior in recent and contemporary cultures • Ethnology – building theories to explain cultural practices based on comparative study of societies throughout the world • Ethnography – a holistic intensive study of groups, through observation, interview and participation • The widespread human tendency to perceive the ways of doing things and beliefs about things in one’s culture as normal and natural and that of others as strange, inferior, and possibly unnatural • Counters Ethnocentrism • Stresses the importance of analyzing cultures in their own terms rather than in terms of the culture of the anthropologist • This does not mean that all cultural practices, cultural beliefs and behaviors can be condoned • Different from ethical relativism — all right and wrong relative to time, place, and culture so that no moral judgments of behavior can be made • Distinguishes anthro form other social sciences • Cultural contact changes native cultures –colonialism • Cultural transformation is due to economic and technological influences