* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download CHAPTER 1 NOTES File
Race (human categorization) wikipedia , lookup
Discovery of human antiquity wikipedia , lookup
Incest taboo wikipedia , lookup
Economic anthropology wikipedia , lookup
Inclusive fitness in humans wikipedia , lookup
Craniometry wikipedia , lookup
Cross-cultural differences in decision-making wikipedia , lookup
Cultural ecology wikipedia , lookup
Intercultural competence wikipedia , lookup
Evolutionary origin of religions wikipedia , lookup
Cultural relativism wikipedia , lookup
Political economy in anthropology wikipedia , lookup
Human variability wikipedia , lookup
Ethnography wikipedia , lookup
Evolutionary archaeology wikipedia , lookup
Forensic anthropology wikipedia , lookup
Social Bonding and Nurture Kinship wikipedia , lookup
History of anthropometry wikipedia , lookup
Post-processual archaeology wikipedia , lookup
American anthropology wikipedia , lookup
Ethnoscience wikipedia , lookup
BOOK NOTES ANTHROPOLOGY 3 CULTURAL ANTHROPOLOGY CHAPTER 1 (Haviland, Prins, Mcbride &Walrath) FALL 2011 1 What is anthropology- the study of humankind, everywhere throughout time! Anthropology produces knowledge about what makes people different and similar about one another. 2. Anthropology consists of 4 sub fields: biological (physical), archaeology, linguistic, and cultural (socio-cultural). As we will see in the course, within these sub fields there are different areas as well. Physical anthropology focuses on humans as biological organisms, often looking at evolutionary development and biological variation. Archaeology recovers human cultures from the past by studying material objects, skeletal remains. Linguistic study language-communication systems, that cultures maintain from generation to generation. 3. Anthropologists study humankind looking at the complexities of human thought, feelings, behavior, and biology, often comparatively. This comparative complexity across humankind creates a holistic approach that anthropologists are known for. 4, Anthropology as it emerged as a discipline in the 19th century grounded itself in scientific inquiry. The modern discipline of anthropology was created in 1886 at university of Pennsylvania and first doctorate was given 1892 at Clark University. Why the book alludes to the complexity of studying humankind, in the west, nations and national cultures began to systematically developing disciplines that used rigorous scientific process and up to that time, many anthropologists were considered “armchair” researchers, taking accounts from others and writing up their assumptions as fact. In the late 19th century, men and women with this education from the universities began going on journeys into studying other peoples. 5) Anthropology is different and distinctive because of its focus on the interconnections and interdependence of all aspects of the human experience in all places and times. Anthropologists, using this holistic perspective makes them aware of their own cultural ideas and values impacts their research. Anthropologists are considered very introspective. They strive to gain objective knowledge about people. While avoiding the pitfalls of ethnocentrism, belief that the ways of one’s own culture is unique to our understanding of diversity in human thought, biology, and behavior, as well as to our understanding of many shared characteristics of humans. 1 6) Anthropologists apply a rigorous methodology for researching cultural practices from the perspective of the cultural beings studied-a methodology that requires them to check for the influences of their own bias. 7) A cross-cultural comparative, and long-term evolutionary perspective distinguishes anthropology from other social sciences. This all-encompassing approach also guards against “culture-bound theories of human behavior: that theories based on assumptions about the world and reality that come from the researchers’ own particular culture. 8) Applied anthropology entails using anthropological knowledge and methods to solve practical problems. They actively collaborate with the communities in which they work. ANTHROPOLOGY AND ITS SUB FIELDS Physical anthropology, or biological focuses on humans as biological organisms. Traditionally the focus was on human evolution, Primatology, growth and development, human adaption, and forensics. Medical anthropology is a specialization that combines theoretical and applied approaches from culture and biological with the study of human health and disease. Today, molecular anthropology, which studies genes and genetics relationships, contributes to human biological diversity. Physical anthropologists contribute to anatomy labs, public health, and criminal investigation. Molecular anthropologists have also been involving in looking at DNA of human remains to determine what group of people they might belong to. Paleoanthropologist is the study of the origins of human species, human evolution. Primatology studies the anatomy and behavior of primates to help understand what we share with our closest living relatives, and what makes humans unique to other primates. Another aspect is human growth, adaption, and variation. Anthropologists examine biological mechanisms of growth as well as the impact of the environment on the growth process. Example of boas comparing heights of immigrants who spent childhood in Eastern Europe and those we grew in the United States. Physical anthropologists, starting with Franz boas have debunked false ideas of biologically defined races. Forensic anthropology is the human skeletal identification of remains for legal purposes. For example they were used in African and Guatemala after mass killings. Cultural anthropology (social and sociocultural) is the study of patterns of human behavior, thought, and feelings. It focuses on humans as culture-producing and culture-reproducing beings. 2 Culture, a society’s shared and socially transmitted ideas, values, and perceptions. Which is used to make sense of experiences and generates behavior and is reflected in that behavior. These standards are socially learned, rather than acquired through biological inheritance. Ethnography- is a detailed description of a particular culture primarily based on fieldwork, which is the term, all anthropologists’ use for on-location research. The hallmark of ethnographic fieldwork is a combination of social participation and personal observation within the community being studied as well as interviews and discussions with individual’s members of a group, the ethnographic method is commonly referred to as participant observation. Ethnographies provide information used to make systematic comparisons among cultures all across the world. Known as ethnology, such cross-cultural research allows anthropologists to develop anthropological theories that help explain why certain important differences or similarities occur among groups. Making systematic comparisons, ethnologists seek to arrive at scientific explanations concerning the function and operation of social practices and cultural features and patterns in all times and places. Linguistic anthropology The most distinctive feature of humankind is language. The branch that studies human languages is linguistic anthropology, while linguistic anthropology shares data and methods from linguistics it differs in that it uses the data and methods to answer anthropological questions relating to society and culture. Linguistic relativity refers to the idea of linguistic diversity reflects not just differences in sounds and grammar, but also differences in ways of looking at the world. Archaeology Is the branch of anthropology that studies human cultures through the recovery and analysis of material remains and environmental data? Materials such as tools, pottery, hearth, and enclosures that remain as traces of cultural practices in the past, as was as human, plant, and marine remains. The arrangement of these traces when recovered reflects specific human ideas and behaviors. Anthropology is often called the most humane of the sciences and the most scientific of the humanities. Anthropology is an empirical social science based on observations or information about humans taken through the senses and verified by others rather than on intuition or faith. Like other scientists, anthropologists begin their research with a hypothesis (tentative explanation or hunch) about the possible relationships between certain observed facts or events. Gathering data to ground such suggested explanation on evidence, anthropologists come up with a theory—an explanation supported by a 3 reliable body of data. Theory guides us in our explorations and may result in new knowledge. The explorations may result in providing evidence that certain explanations however popular or firmly believed are unfounded. Empirical evidence is relied upon. Every theory can be challenged. Doctrine or dogma is an asserted opinion or belief formally handed down by an authority as true and indisputable. Fieldwork Anthropologists immerse themselves into data become so familiar with the details; they begin to recognize underlying patterns in the data, many of which might have been overlooked. These help frame meaningful hypotheses. Which are subjected to further testing or validation in the field. Anthropological researchers monitor themselves by constantly checking their own biases and assumptions as they work. They present these self-reflections along with their observations, a practice known ask reflexivity. Another researcher establishes the validity or the reliability of a researcher’s conclusions through the replication of observations and/or experiments. Fieldwork requires the researcher to step out of his or her cultural comfort zone into a world that is unfamiliar. Anthropologists in the field are likely to face a host of challenges-physical, social, mental, political, and ethical. They deal with unaccustomed food, climate, and hygiene conditions. They often struggle with mental challenges as being lonely, feeling like a perpetual outsider, being socially clumsy and clueless in their new cultural setting. 4