* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Anthropological Theory
Social mobility wikipedia , lookup
Inclusive fitness in humans wikipedia , lookup
Social stratification wikipedia , lookup
American anthropology wikipedia , lookup
Tribe (Internet) wikipedia , lookup
Social Bonding and Nurture Kinship wikipedia , lookup
Ethnography wikipedia , lookup
Origins of society wikipedia , lookup
Economic anthropology wikipedia , lookup
Cultural anthropology wikipedia , lookup
SUICIDE STATISTICS http://www.afsp.org/index.cfm?page_id=04ea 1254-bd31-1fa3-c549d77e6ca6aa37 http://www.who.int/mental_health/prevention/ suicide_rates/en ANTHROPOLOGICAL THEORY BRONISLAW MALINOWSKI BRONISLAW MALINOWSKI http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f22VsAlOwb c 3 BRONISLAW MALINOWSKI Born: Krakow, Poland on April 7, 1884 Parents: Family: Very Lucyan & Jozefa Malinowski Upper-class cultured Scholarly 4 MALINOWSKI: EDUCATION Ph.D. in Philosophy, Physics, and Mathematics University of Krakow in 1908 1913: Lectured at London School of Economics Ph.D. in Science in 1916 5 MALINOWSKI Founded: Social Functionalism Anthropology All components of society interlock to form a well-balanced system 6 FUNCTIONALISM Britain: Shift Reaction to th 19 c. evolution from Social change Evolution To Social How stability societies stayed the same 7 SOCIAL CONTEXT FOR FUNCTIONALISM World->Colonies Problem: Ruling native people? Required: Practical knowledge of social & political structures 8 SOCIAL CONTEXT FOR FUNCTIONALISM Research focus: Functioning of social systems Information served colonial administration Focus: Maintaining order & stability BRITAIN – SOCIAL ANTHROPOLOGY Social Structure = Enduring patterns of social relationships Function: Society= Organism Parts work together to maintain system Emphasis on equilibrium Change->Upsets the equilibrium 10 MALINOWSKI INTRODUCTION Emphasized characteristics of: Beliefs Ceremonies Customs Institutions Religion Ritual Sexual taboos 11 MALINOWSKI INTRODUCTION First field study came in 1915-18 Studied the Trobriand Islanders of New Guinea in the southwest Pacific Used holistic approach to study natives’ social interactions including: Annual Kula Ring Exchange 12 BRONISLAW MALINOWSKI 1915 WW I started Remained the war in New Guinea for duration of Lived with Trobriand Islanders Became a well-known anthropologist 1922 Argonauts of the Western Pacific 13 MALINOWSKI BIOPSYCHOLOGICAL FUNCTIONALISM Society: Functions to meet needs of individuals All people have these needs 3 Levels of Needs: 1. Biological 2. Instrumental 3. Integrative 14 BIOPSYCHOLOGICAL FUNCTIONALISM These fundamental needs must be supplied by culture Anthropologists could study the ways in which a culture meets these needs for its people. BIOPSYCHOLOGICAL FUNCTIONALISM 1. Biological needs: Nutrition Reproduction Bodily comforts Safety Relaxation Movement MALINOWSKI BIOPSYCHOLOGICAL FUNCTIONALISM 2. Instrumental needs: Law Education BIOPSYCHOLOGICAL FUNCTIONALISM 3. Integrative needs: Religion Art BIOPSYCHOLOGICAL FUNCTIONALISM Culture provides: Stability, cohesion, and physical survival through: Myths Symbols Rituals TROBRIANDS STUDY Characteristics of Malinowski’s method Lived as a native among natives Watched them daily at work and at play Conversations with them their language Information from personal observation Statements directly by the natives 20 MW WHAT IS AN ETHNOGRAPHY? Documents people’s routine daily lives Explores a cultural group Live with group being studied, or spends a lot of time with them “Guiding question” that evolves during the study 21 GOALS OF ETHNOGRAPHY Unobtrusive Identify geographical & temporal location To reveal little known societies To obtain insider’s view Understand point of view from inside the group 22 GOALS OF ETHNOGRAPHY Identify behavior patterns Make reader understand perspective of native Understand: Context Complexity Politics of social processes 23 GUIDELINES FOR DOING ETHNOGRAPHIC WORK Accuracy of information Complexity of information Careful Observation Speak native language No contact with white people Seek information naturally Instead of through informants 24 TROBRIAND KULA RING 25 HOLISM: Kula is an exchange system in Trobriand Islands: Politics Alliance formation Prestige Feasting Economic trade Magic Contributes to the integration of society 26 KULA Ethnographic work (Holism): Deal with the totality—an anatomy of culture To study only religion (or technology) creates an artificial field of inquiry 27 MAKING THE STRANGE FAMILIAR Ethnology introduced law & order into what seemed chaotic & freakish Transformed sensational, wild & unaccountable world of “savages” into a number of well-ordered communities Key: Society exists to fulfill the needs of the individual 28 TROBRIAND ISLANDERS • Subsistence--fishing agriculture • Matrilineal and yam society: Descent traced from mother’s line • Inheritance passes from mother’s brother to sister’s son • Brother required to gift (yams) his sister’s family EXCHANGE AND TRADE • Most spectacular and prestigious exchanges occurred between islands • Known as kula • Involved long sailing expeditions across open sea BASIC FEATURES OF THE KULA • Separation between utilitarian exchange (gimwali) and ceremonial exchanges (kula) • Kula: Exchange of ceremonial items: soulava (necklaces) and mwali (armbands) • Items not kept permanently • • At most 1 or 2 years Possession of famous kula items brings person renown & prestige FEATURES OF THE KULA Partners in the kula were lifelong trading partners obliged to each other for: Hospitality Help Assistance Minor kula exchanges within a group of islands preceded major expeditions. Usually year. one overseas trading expedition per Prow of a Kula Canoe, c. 1993 FEATURES OF THE KULA Two types of Kula gifts Symbolic value 1. Shell-disc necklaces (Soulava) that are traded to the north (circling the ring in clockwise direction) 2. Shell armbands (Mwali) that are traded in the southern direction (circling counterclockwise). 2 TYPES OF GIFTS Soulava Mwali MALINOWSKI’S CONTRIBUTIONS (1884-1942) A founding father of British social anthropology British From anthropology paradigm shift: speculative and historical (evolutionary) to The ahistorical study of social institutions MALINOWSKI’S CONTRIBUTIONS Greatest contribution as an ethnographer Importance of studying social behavior in cultural contexts Participant-observation Consider observable differences between norms and action: Between what people say they do and what they actually do MALINOWSKI’S CONTRIBUTIONS Detailed descriptions of Trobriand social life and thought Kinship & Marriage (e.g., "sociological paternity“ vs “biological”) In economic anthropology (e.g., “Reciprocity") Explain human economic behavior using both economics and anthropology