PDF-(BOOS)-Cultural Anthropology Fieldwork Journal
Author : NicoleBowers | Published Date : 2022-09-03
Designed to complementCultural Anthropology A Toolkit for a Global Age every activity in the Fieldwork Journal enhances students understanding of the concepts covered
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(BOOS)-Cultural Anthropology Fieldwork Journal: Transcript
Designed to complementCultural Anthropology A Toolkit for a Global Age every activity in the Fieldwork Journal enhances students understanding of the concepts covered in the parent textbook When paired with each chapter s reading practicing fieldwork skills such as notetaking interviewing mapmaking and drawing largescale conclusions from careful observation will engage students more deeply in the course material Compact and easy to use the Fieldwork Journal includes space to write notes and record data. ANTH 221: Peoples and Cultures of Mexico. Kimberly Martin, Ph.D.. What is Anthropology?. DEFINITION. Anthropology is the holistic, synthetic, multidisciplinary study of human beings.. KEY COMPONENTS. Chapter One. HSP3UI. Ms. Dahl. Branches of Anthropology. Cultural Anthropology. Culture is the total system of ideas, values, . behaviours. , and attitudes of a society commonly learned and shared by members of a society.. Part One: Building the Discipline. Evolutionism. AIM: Why did evolutionism fade away?. Evolutionism. Dominate intellectual perspective in the middle of the 19. th. century.. Evolutionism eventually overtaken by historical . ANTH 250: Issues in Anthropology. Kimberly Martin, Ph.D.. What is Anthropology?. DEFINITION. Anthropology is the holistic, synthetic, multidisciplinary study of human beings.. 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.. Recall . ANTHROPOLOGY . Definition:. The scientific study of hominids and human culture over time . Focus on:. On hominids/humans as members of a species or cultural group. On humankind as a species, throughout time; . Fieldwork. Data Collection. Participant-Observation. Interviewing. Census Taking. Mapping. Document Analysis. Collecting Genealogies. Photography. Quantitative data. Quantitative data:. Statistical or measurable information, such as demographic composition, the types and quantities of crops grown, or the ratio of spouses born and raised within or outside the community.. ANT 152 . CLASS 2 . Learning Objectives. 2. .1. . Discuss how cultural anthropologists do research.. 2. .2. . Recognize what fieldwork in cultural anthropology involves.. 2. .3. . List some urgent issues in cultural anthropology research.. Introductory Lecture. Anthropology 100: Survey of Anthropology. Learning Objectives. 1. Develop an understanding of anthropology and how the subfields of anthropology interrelate. 2. Develop an understanding for the importance of anthropology in today’s world. HSP3C. Ms. . Maharaj. What is Anthropology?. . Anthropology is the broad study of . humankind. . around the world and throughout time. . . It is concerned with both the . biological and the cultural aspects of humans.. Howard Culbertson. Southern Nazarene University. Lewis Henry Morgan . 1818-1881. A 19th century scholar who developed the evolutionary approach. Pioneered the comparative study of culture. Sir Edward B. Tylor . This book looks at the \'self\' in Western, Asian and African societies passing though Greek philosophy, Buddhism, Hinduism, Confuscism, Tao and African philosophy and ending with contemporary feminism. Scholarly and written in a lucid style, free of jargon, this work is written from an anthropological perspective with an interdisciplinary approach. Morris emphasises the varying conceptions of the self found cross-culturally and contrasts these with the conceptions found in the Western intellectual traditions. Ethnographic Fieldwork: An Anthropological Reader provides a comprehensive selection of classic and contemporary reflections, examining the tensions between self and other, the relationships between anthropologists and informants, conflicts and ethical challenges, various types of ethnographic research, and different styles of writing about fieldwork.Discusses fieldwork in general, as opposed to its formal methodsPresents a good sense of the historical and conceptual development of fieldwork as the predominant methodological approach of social and cultural anthropologyIncludes introductory chapter and 38 leading articles on ethnographic fieldwork in cultural anthropology, organized around ten themes - Beginnings Fieldwork Identity Fieldwork Relations and Rapport The Other Talks Back Conflicts, Hazards, and Dangers in Fieldwork Ethics Multi-Sited Fieldwork Sensorial Fieldwork Reflexive Ethnography and Fictive Fieldwork and Fieldwork Novels. Dr. Siemens. Office-Sierra Hall 240M. Office Telephone (818) 677-4931. Office Hours. Tuesday and Thursday . 8:20-9:. 20AM 3:30-4PM. and . by appointment. Email . stephen.siemens@csun.edu. 3x5 Card. Lavenda. , Dods, and Mulholland. Chapter 1: The Anthropological Perspective. on the Human Condition. The Anthropological Perspective: The Cross-disciplinary Discipline. Anthropology and the Concept of Culture.
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