Chapter 1 What is Anthropology?
Download
Report
Transcript Chapter 1 What is Anthropology?
Chapter 1
What is Anthropology?
The Scope of Anthropology
The Holistic Approach
The Anthropological Curiosity
Fields of Anthropology
Specialization
The Relevance of Anthropology
Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. All
rights reserved.
Most common answers from our class assessment…
What is Anthropology?
1.
2.
The study of mankind, humanity, evolution and adaptation
Study of human behavior, culture, interaction, and relationship
between humans and the environment
What is Cultural Anthropology?
1.
2.
The study of culture, customs, beliefs, and traditions
Study of differences in culture
The Scope of Anthropology
Anthropology can be defined as the study
of humankind in all times and places
Broader in scope than other disciplines
Every part of the world containing human
populations is of interest to anthropological
study.
Includes studying other primates to look
for clues about our ancestral origins
The Holistic Approach
Anthropology is a unique discipline
because it employs a holistic, or
multifaceted, approach to the study of
human beings.
The Anthropological Curiosity
Anthropologists generally focus on typical
characteristics of a population.
When describing a group of people, anthropologists may
discuss:
the history of the area in which they live,
the physical environment,
the organization of family life,
the general features of their language,
their political and economic systems,
their religion,
their diet, or
their styles of art and dress.
Fields of Anthropology
Figure 1-1 (p. 5)
The Subdivisions of Anthropology
The four major subdisciplines of anthropology (in bold
letters) may be classified according to subject matter
(physical or cultural) hand according to the period with
which each is concerned (distant past versus recent
past and present). There are applications of
anthropology in all four subdisciplines.
Biological (physical) Anthropology
Two Primary Focuses of Study:
Human Paleontology
Look at the emergence of humans and their later evolution
Reconstruct human evolution through fossils
Human Variation
Investigate how and why human populations differ in biological or
physical characteristics
Cultural Anthropology
Cultural anthropology is concerned with
how and why cultures vary or are similar
in the past and present.
The Three Branches of Cultural Anthropology are:
Archaeology
Linguistics
Ethnology
Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. All
rights reserved.
Archaeology
Archaeologists try to reconstruct history
from the remains of human cultures.
How do archaeologists differ from
historians?
Most studies deal with prehistory
Some specialize in historical archaeology
Anthropological Linguistics
The anthropological study of
language.
Historical Linguistics
Study of how languages change over time and how they are
related
Descriptive or Structural Linguistics
Study how contemporary languages may differ
Sociolinguistics
Study how language is used in social context
Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. All
rights reserved.
Ethnology
Commonly referred to as cultural
anthropology, ethnology is concerned
with patterns of thought and behavior.
Ethnographers
Ethnohistorian
Cross-Cultural Researcher
Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. All
rights reserved.
Applied Anthropology
About half of all professional
anthropologists are applied, or
practicing, anthropologists.
Applied anthropologists may be
trained in one or more of the subfields
of anthropology.
The Relevance of Anthropology
In order to understand humans, it is
essential that we study humans in all
times and places.
Anthropological studies can illustrate
why other people are the way they
are, both culturally and physically.