Title: WHAT IS ANTHROPOLOGY?
1WHAT IS ANTHROPOLOGY?
- Lesson 1
- An overview of the discipline
2Anthropology
- The study of all humans regardless of where or
when they live/lived.
Page 2 in Core Concepts in Cultural Anthropology
3Who are Humans?
- Taxonomy Homo sapiens
- Roughly 175,000 200,000 years old
- The genus Homo means human and
- extends back to 2.5 million years ago
- Bipedal meaning we walk on two feet
- The only living primate to do so
- Bipedal primates called hominids
- Hominids are 5 7 million years old
4People are generally like me
- Same desires?
- Same beliefs?
- Same attitudes?
- Same values?
5Naïve realism
The assumption that people are generally the same
all throughout the world
Reading 5 in Conformity and Conflicy
6The Anthropological Perspective
- Holistic
- Comparative
- Field-Based
- Evolutionary
Pages 2-3 in Core Concepts in Cultural
Anthropology
7American Anthropology
- Differs from British social anthropology
- Franz Boas - the father of American
anthropology
Pages 207 - 209 in Core Concepts in Cultural
Anthropology
8The Four Field Approach
- Physical Anthropology
- Linguistic Anthropology
- Socio-cultural Anthropology
- Archaeology
Page 3 in Core Concepts in Cultural Anthropology
9Physical/Biological Anthropology
- Humans as biological organisms
- Present variation
- Evolution
- Paleoanthropology
- Forensic anthropology
- Primates
Pages 3-4 in Core Concepts in Cultural
Anthropology
10The Primate Family Tree
The Primates
Prosimians
Anthropoids
Monkeys
Hominoids
Apes
Humans
11Linguistic Anthropology
- Human language transmits culture
- Language history
- Language acquisition among children
- Language in society and the power embedded in
language
Pages 6-7 in Core Concepts in Cultural
Anthropology
12Archaeology
- Diggers
- Study material remains - artifacts
- Reconstruct the past
- Prehistoric
- Historic
Pages 7-8 in Core Concepts in Cultural
Anthropology
13Socio-cultural Anthropology
- The study of present culture and society
- Cross-cultural in scope
- Comparative
- Often study contemporary social issues
Pages 4-6 in Core Concepts in Cultural
Anthropology
14ANTHROPOLOGYSHISTORY DEVELOPMENT
- Anthropology as an Academic Discipline
15The History of Anthropology
- Age of Exploration
- Beginning in the 15th Century
- Grew out of contact between Western Europeans and
others throughout the world - Encountered a wide range of peoples who were
physically and behaviorally different
16Early Understandings of Diversity
- Europeans used their Judeo-Christian background
to interpret physical and cultural differences - By the middle 19th century, sciences like geology
and biology began to be used to understand the
world
17The Birth of Anthropology
- Anthropology grows out of this shift to rationale
thought - Initially, anthropologists were used by colonial
governments to study indigenous peoples so that
they could be better governed - Translation Anthropology got its start as a tool
of colonial oppression
18Early Anthropological Theory
- Positivism
- The first major approach was the Social
Evolutionist
Pages 202-203 in Core Concepts in Cultural
Anthropology
19Social Evolutionism
- Lewis Henry Morgan
- (1818-1881)
- Unilineal Social/
- Cultural Evolution
Pages 203-205 in Core Concepts in Cultural
Anthropology
20Social Evolutionism
- Who first said the phrase - Survival of the
fittest?
Pages 204-205 in Core Concepts in Cultural
Anthropology
21Problems with Social Evolutionism
- Extremely biased
- Used biological arguments
- Used to justify Colonialism
Page 205 in Core Concepts in Cultural
Anthropology
22Time for a Change
- Rejection of social evolutionism
- Boas led the new school of American anthropology
- He emphasized
- Holistic perspective
- The comparative method
Page 206 in Core Concepts in Cultural
Anthropology
23Early British Social Anthropology
- Bronislaw Malinowski (1888 1942)
- Anthropological fieldwork
- Functionalism
Page 206-207 in Core Concepts in Cultural
Anthropology
24Early British Social Anthropology
- A.R. Radcliffe-Brown
- (1881 1955)
- Structural-Functionalism
Page 206 - 207 in Core Concepts in Cultural
Anthropology
25The Great Debate
- What should be the defining concept in
anthropology?
The British camp Society The American camp
Culture
While this debate seems trivial, it divided both
sides
Page 207 - 208 in Core Concepts in Cultural
Anthropology
26Another Shift in Thought
- Postmodernism
- Can anthropology be scientific?
27Exam Review Questions
- What are the 4 fields of American anthropology
(Chapter 1 in Core Concepts)? - What are the sub-disciplines (if any) within the
four fields? - Where, when, and how did anthropology develop as
an academic discipline (Chapter 12 in Core
Concepts)? - Is anthropology an old discipline?
- How did colonial Europeans view of humanity and
how did this ideology factor into anthropologys
development? - Who were the key early anthropologists with
regards to the following theoretical ideas? - Comparative method
- Structural-functionalism
- Functionalism
- Social Darwinism
- Unilineal cultural evolution