ANTH 250: Issues in Anthropology
Kimberly Martin, Ph.D.
KEY COMPONENTS
1. Anthropology seeks and uses all information about both individual humans and groups of humans regardless of time, geographic location, culture or types of evidence.
2. Anthropology studies the biological, psychological, social and cultural aspects of being human in the present and in the past.
3. Anthropology draws knowledge and methods from any discipline that can help understand humanness
4. Anthropology attempts to integrate information from many disciplines into a single whole picture of what it means to be humans
KEY COMPONENTS
Physical Anthropology, also called Biological
Anthropology, is the study
1.
Physical anthro studies human evolution to understand when humans first existed and how the human body has changed through time of the genetic, anatomical and physiological aspects of humanness, including
2.
Physical anthro studies how and why human individuals and groups differ from one another biologically in the past and present our relationship to other kinds of animals in the past and present.
3.
Physical anthro studies how humans are alike and different from other animals, especially those most like us, the non-human primates
Some Key Definitions
•
• Anatomy is the study of the structure and architecture of the body.
Physiology is the study of how the body operates.
• Adaptation is adjustment to social, cultural or physical environmental conditions. Adaptation can be behavioral
(cultural) or genetic
(biological).
Paleoanthropologists Forensic Anthropologists study human fossil remains
Human Variation apply anthropological knowledge about the human body to solve crimes
Specialists study how human anatomy and physiology are adapted to particular environments
Human Epidemiologists study how human biology and cultural practices affect health and disease patterns
Human Geneticists study patterns of gene distribution in human populations, as well as the consequences of particular genes to individuals
Primatologists study similarities and differences between humans and our closest relatives, the non-human primates
Archaeology is the study of the material remains of human cultures from the past and in the present.
KEY COMPONENTS
1. Archaeology studies things that people make (artifacts like pottery or tools) and leave behind
2. Archaeology studies things that people alter (features like roads and buildings) and leave behind
3. Archaeology studies environmental clues that show the circumstances in which people live or lived (ecofacts)
4. Archaeologists are interested in material culture from the past as well as from the present
Some Key Definitions
• Artifacts are portable objects that people make and leave behind.
• Features are changes that people make in the physical and biological environment .
• Ecofacts are pieces of evidence about the environment in which people lived in the past.
• Survey is the process of locating archaeological sites from clues on the surface.
• Excavation is the process of digging down into sites to uncover artifacts and ecofacts.
Classical Archaeologists Contract Archaeologists
Study the remains from the
Identifying, evaluating, and managing sites foundational societies for Western threatened by development.
Civilization
Ethnoarchaeologists
Study how living societies make and use tools and other material objects to draw analogies with ancient materials
Historical Archaeologists
Study the remains of historically documented societies to provide additional data on how people lived.
Experimental
Archaeologists
Attempt to reconstruct how material culture and cultural features were constructed and used in the past.
What is Linguistic Anthropology?
DEFINITION
Linguistic Anthropology is the study of language and communication.
KEY COMPONENTS
1.
Linguistic anthropologists describe how languages are produced and used
2.
Linguistic anthropologists study how language changes through time
3.
Linguistic anthropologists study how language usage varies in different social contexts
4.
Linguistic anthropologists study how knowing a particular language influences how people think
5.
Linguistic anthropologists study how people communicate non-verbally through gestures, body language and the use of space.
6.
Language is a central part of culture
Some Key Definitions
• Communication is the act of transmitting information from one entity to another.
• Speech is the act of communicating using language.
• Language is the abstract, learned, shared rules and standards for understanding and generating speech.
• Symbol is something that arbitrarily represents something else.
• Icon is something that represents something else because of a logical connection.
Descriptive Linguists study how languages are produced and organized
Historical Linguists study how languages change over time
Developmental Linguists study how children acquire language
Paralanguage Experts study pitch, tone and rhythm in language
Ethnolinguists study how knowing a particular language affects the way people think
Proxemics Experts study the use of space to communicate
Sociolinguists
Kinesics Experts study body language and gestures study how language use changes in differing social situations
What is Cultural Anthropology?
Cultural Anthropology, also called Sociocultural Anthropology, is the study of contemporary and historic human societies through their cultures.
KEY COMPONENTS
1.
Cultural anthropology studies living societies and descriptions of living societies
2.
Cultural anthropology uses fieldwork and participantobservation to understand other ways of life
3.
Cultural anthropology attempts to take a cultural relativist perspective on other cultures
4.
Cultural anthropology is interested in all aspects of life in a society and how they fit together
Some Key Definitions
• Culture is the abstract, learned, shared rules and standards for interpreting experiences and generating behavior.
• Ethnocentrism is judging another culture using your own culture’s rules and standards.
• Society is a group of people living together according to a shared culture.
• Cultural relativism is judging another society using its own culture’s rules and standards.
Some Key Definitions
• Fieldwork is the study of a group/society in its normal physical and cultural environment.
• Ethnography is the process of studying and describing a culture in detail.
Kung
• http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=
XU-PceRraU0
• http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=
_nygexkKha0
• An ethnography is a description of a culture in detail.
Egypt
• http://www.youtube.com/watch?
v=BfzD4HlziVE
• Ethnology is comparative study of ethnographies
(cultures).
Cultural Ecologists Political Anthropologists study how culture interacts with the study how power and authority are environment
Social Anthropologists study the rules for forming kin and non Medical Anthropologists kin social groups in society delegated and rules enforced in society
Economic Anthropologists study how culture and human biology interact to create disease study how people produce and distribute
and illness in societies the things they need to survive
Psychological Anthropologists study how individuals grow and function in different cultural contexts
Aesthetic Anthropologists study what is considered beautiful and how beauty is created in different societies