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Cultural Anthropology 8th Edition Serena Nanda Richard Warms Chapter 1 Anthropology and Human Diversity Chapter Outline What are the aims of cultural anthropology? In what ways does anthropology differ from other social sciences? What are the different subfields within anthropology? Chapter Outline How do anthropologists understand human biological diversity? How does anthropology help us understand our own and other cultures? How have changes in the world affected the practice of anthropology? Goals of Anthropology Describe, analyze and explain different cultures. Show how groups adapted to their environments and gave meaning to their lives. Comprehend the entire human experience. Areas of Specialization Cultural Anthropology Linguistic Anthropology Archaeology Physical Anthropology Applied Anthropology Cultural Anthropology Study human culture and society. Focus on the search for general principles that underlie all cultures. Examine the dynamics of a particular culture. Linguistic Anthropology Focus on understanding language and it’s relation to culture. Study human languages: – Development – Variation – Relationship of language to culture. – How languages are learned. Archaeology Study of past cultures through their material remains. Reconstruct past cultures by studying artifacts. Interpret artifact’s function by precise position in which it was found. Physical Anthropology Study humans from a biological perspective. Paleoanthropology: Biological processes of human adaptation. Human variation: Physiological differences among modern humans. Primatology: Study of apes for clues about the human species. Applied Anthropology Analyze social, political and economic problems and develop solutions. Includes all fields of anthropology. Ethnocentrism Belief that one’s culture is better than all other cultures. Measures other cultures by the degree to which they live up to one’s own cultural standards. Can help bind a culture together, or can lead to racism. Biological Diversity Wide diversity in human shapes and colors,low levels of skeletal and blood type diversity. People from the same region tend to share more traits than they do with people from distant lands. Racial Classification Race is socially constructed. No group of humans is biologically different from another. Humans have an equal capacity for culture. Racism The idea that characteristics are caused by racial inheritance. Differences among human groups are the result of culture. Humans belong to the same species with the same features essential to life. Emic and Etic Views of Culture Emic: Describes the organization and meaning a culture’s practices have for its members. Etic: Tries to determine the causes of particular cultural patterns that may be beyond the awareness of the culture being studied.