Anthropology for dummies:
Explains the fundamentals of biological and cultural anthropology and tips on how to find a career in anthropology
Gespeichert in:
1. Verfasser: | |
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Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Hoboken, N.J.
Wiley
2008
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Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Zusammenfassung: | Explains the fundamentals of biological and cultural anthropology and tips on how to find a career in anthropology |
Beschreibung: | Includes index |
Beschreibung: | XX, 360 S. Ill. 24 cm |
ISBN: | 9780470279663 |
Internformat
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520 | |a Explains the fundamentals of biological and cultural anthropology and tips on how to find a career in anthropology | ||
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adam_text | Table of Contents
Introduction................................................................. 1
About This Book..............................................................................................2
Conventions Used in This Book.....................................................................2
What You re Not to Read................................................................................4
Foolish Assumptions.......................................................................................4
How This Book Is Organized..........................................................................5
Part I: What Is Anthropology?..............................................................5
Part II: Physical Anthropology and Archaeology...............................5
Part III: Cultural Anthropology and Linguistics.................................5
Part IV: So What? Anthropology, the Modern World, and You........6
Part V: The Part of Tens........................................................................6
Icons Used in This Book.................................................................................6
Where to Go from Here...................................................................................7
Part h What Is Anthropoioqy!.......................................9
Chapter 1: Human Beings and Being Human:
An Overview of Anthropology..................................11
Digging Into Anthropology s History..........................................................12
Getting Acquainted with Anthropology s Subfields..................................12
Physical anthropology........................................................................13
Archaeology..........................................................................................14
Cultural Anthropology........................................................................14
Linguistics.............................................................................................15
Making Sense of Anthropology s Methods.................................................16
Applied Anthropology: Using the Science in Everyday Life.....................16
Chapter 2: Looking Into Humanity s Mirror:
Anthropology s History........................................19
Getting to the Heart of Anthropology.........................................................20
Dazed and Confused: What It Is to Be Human...........................................21
Two types of culture............................................................................22
Two types of modernity......................................................................23
-Isms and the Making of Anthropology.......................................................24
Colonialism...........................................................................................25
Antiquarianism.....................................................................................26
Scientism...............................................................................................27
Holism...................................................................................................29
Anthropology Today.....................................................................................29
Anthropology For Dummies
Chapter 3: Actually, Four Mirrors: How Anthropology Is Studied___31
Physical Anthropology and the Evolutionary Basis of Biology...............32
You say you want an evolution..........................................................33
More facets of physical anthropology..............................................35
The biocultural animal........................................................................38
Archaeology: The Study of Ancient Societies............................................40
Archaeology and evolution.................................................................41
More facets of archaeology................................................................42
Linguistic Anthropology...............................................................................45
Nonhuman animal communication...................................................46
Spoken language..................................................................................46
Gesture and body language................................................................47
Cultural Anthropology: The Study of Living Societies..............................48
Putting the culture in cultural anthropology...................................49
Attempting to explain why humans do what they do.....................50
Participant observation......................................................................51
Applied anthropology and global culture.........................................53
Partlh Physical Anthropology and Archaeology...........55
Chapter 4: The Wildest Family Reunion: Meet the Primates........57
Monkey Business: Primate Origins..............................................................57
You Look Like an Ape: Primate Species......................................................59
What s in a name? General primate characteristics........................60
Going ape (and prosimian): Primate subgroups..............................61
Yes, We Have No Bananas: Primate Subsistence......................................67
The indiscriminate-eaters: Omnivores..............................................68
The bug-eaters: Insectivores..............................................................69
The leaf-eaters: Folivores....................................................................69
The fruit-eaters: Frugivores................................................................70
Monkeying Around: Primate Locomotion..................................................71
Stand back, Tarzan: The brachiators................................................71
Bug-bashers: The vertical-clingers-and-leapers...............................72
In the trees: Arboreal quadrupeds....................................................72
Soldiers beware: Terrestrial quadrupeds.........................................73
A group of one: Bipeds........................................................................74
Monkey See, Monkey Do: Primate Social Groups and Behavior..............75
Primates Today (But For How Long?).........................................................77
Chapter 5: My Career Is in Ruins: How Anthropologists
Learn about the Past..........................................81
What, How Old, and Where: It s All You Need to Know............................82
The significance of where...................................................................82
The significance of when....................................................................83
The significance of artifacts...............................................................83
Table of Contents
Keeping Time: How Archaeologists Date Finds.........................................85
The deeper, the older: Stratigraphy..................................................85
Before or after? Relative dating.........................................................87
Absolutely probably 6,344 years old (plus or minus):
Radiometrie absolute dating..........................................................87
Saving Space: How Archaeologists Keep Track
of Where Artifacts Are Found...................................................................90
Be there: Provenience.........................................................................90
Be square: Site grids............................................................................91
Type Casting: How Archaeologists Classify Their Finds..........................92
Types of types: The theory of classification....................................92
Unearthing the most common artifact types...................................93
Chapter 6: Bones of Contention: The Fossil Evidence
for Early Human Evolution.....................................97
Great Africa: The Earliest Hominids............................................................98
Stand and Deliver: The Riddles of Bipedalism...........................................99
Walking upright: Pros and cons.........................................................99
The complexities of early hominid evolution................................100
All the Same from the Neck Down: The Australopithecines..................103
The basic differences and similarities............................................103
The crusher: Robust australopithecines...................,....................105
The omnivore: Gracile australopithecines.....................................107
The Cracked Mirror: Early Homo..............................................................109
Exploring characteristics of early Homo........................................109
Dalmatians and cigar smoke: Finds at Olduvai Gorge...................110
Out of Africa: Early dispersals of early Homo................................Ill
Tool time: The decoupling of behavior from anatomy.................112
The Traveler: The Accomplishments of Homo erectus..........................112
Characteristics of Homo erectus.....................................................113
From confrontational scavenging to ambush hunting..................114
The use of fire.....................................................................................114
Symmetry, watercraft, and the 15-minute culture ......................114
Chapter 7: It s Good to Be Home: Homo sapiens sapiens.
Our Biological Species.......................................117
Distinguishing Modern Homo sapiens sapiens (That s You!)................118
Anatomical modernity.......................................................................118
Behavioral modernity........................................................................119
Africa: The Cradle of Humanity.................................................................120
Discovering the first AMHss.............................................................120
Exploring behavioral modernity.:....................................................121
Out of Africa: An Epic Migration................................................................122
Taking a closer look at Neanderthals..............................................123
Getting Neanderthals and AMHss together....................................124
Anthropology For Dummies
The Origins of Language: The Social Grooming Theory.........................126
The Origins of the Modern Mind...............................................................128
The evolution of consciousness: Two models...............................128
The roots of myth..............................................................................130
The roots of ritual..............................................................................131
The roots of symbolism....................................................................131
Chapter 8: Hunting, Fishing, Sailing, and Sledding:
The Spread of Humanity Worldwide...........................133
Migration and Survival: The Decoupling of Behavior from Biology......133
The Colonization of Australasia.................................................................136
The mysteries of Australian colonization.......................................136
What anthropologists know for sure...............................................137
Another Grand Exploration: The Colonization of the New World.........137
Dueling hypotheses: A couple of migration theories....................137
Just the facts, ma am.........................................................................139
Igloos, Dogs, and Whalebone Knives: The Colonization
of the Arctic..............................................................................................140
First arrivals.......................................................................................141
The Thule expansion.........................................................................141
The Voyage of Ru and Hina: The Colonization of the Pacific.................142
The tools of the explorers................................................................143
The society of the explorers.............................................................143
Chapter 9: Old, Old McDonald: The Origins of Farming...........145
The Principle of Domestication.................................................................145
Cultural selection...............................................................................146
Effects of farming on society............................................................146
Plant domestication...........................................................................147
Animal domestication.......................................................................148
Principles of Horticulture...........................................................................149
Distinctive characteristics of horticulture.....................................149
Garden horticulture...........................................................................150
Slashing and burning.........................................................................150
Limited storage..................................................................................151
Principles of Farming..................................................................................152
Distinguishing state farming from horticulture.............................152
Water control.....................................................................................153
Animal domestication, farming-style...............................................153
Massive storage.................................................................................155
Farming facilities and tools..............................................................155
Secondary products..........................................................................157
Looking Back on the Origins of Farming...................................................158
Why farm in the first place?..............................................................158
In the Near East..................................................................................161
In Africa...............................................................................................161
Table of Contents
In East Asia.........................................................................................162
In the Western Pacific.......................................................................163
In the Americas..................................................................................163
Chapter 10: The Development of Civilization....................165
Human Subsistence and Social Organization...........................................165
Human subsistence...........................................................................166
Human social organization...............................................................170
The Characteristics of Civilization............................................................173
Urbanization.......................................................................................174
Long-distance trade...........................................................................174
Social stratification............................................................................175
Durable record-keeping/writing.......................................................175
Standing armies and extended warfare...........................................176
Money..................................................................................................177
Slavery.................................................................................................177
Territorial sovereignty......................................................................178
Vassal tribute.....................................................................................178
Non-food production specialists......................................................178
Astronomy and/or mathematics......................................................179
Monumental architecture.................................................................179
State religion.......................................................................................180
Taxes...................................................................................................181
Charting the Rise and Fall of the First Civilizations................................181
Egypt....................................................................................................181
Inca......................................................................................................184
Civilization Today: Will It Fall, Too?..........................................................185
Part 111: Cultural Anthropology and Linguistics........... 187
Chapter 11: The Spice of Life: Human Culture....................189
Demystifying the Definition of Culture.....................................................189
What Culture Is and What Culture Isn t....................................................190
Culture versus cultured....................................................................191
Why human behavior differs............................................................191
Cultural Universals......................................................................................192
Having an Out-of-Body Experience............................................................194
Adaptation and its implications.......................................................195
Behaviors............................................................................................195
Values......................... .........................................................................196
Objects................................................................................................197
Language: Passing the baton of culture..........................................198
Anthropology For Dummies
Opening Your Human Behavior Owner s Manual....................................198
Culture = software, brain = hardware..............................................199
Problems with the software/hardware analogy.............................199
Getting Your Cultural Education...............................................................200
Life stages...........................................................................................200
Stages of human learning..................................................................201
From Mop-Tops to Motley Crue: What Is Cultural Change?...................201
Diffusion versus assimilation...........................................................202
Innovation...........................................................................................203
Cultural Evolution........................................................................................203
How culture evolves..........................................................................204
What cultural evolution doesn t mean............................................204
Chapter 12: From Kalahari to Minneapolis:
How Cultural Anthropologists Work...........................205
Watching Cultural Anthropology Grow Up..................................................206
Battling ethnocentrism.....................................................................206
Getting scientific................................................................................207
Embodying the etic modernist approach:
Bronislaw Malinowski....................................................................210
A More Personal Approach: Ernie Research............................................212
Recognizing how a researcher s choices influence the results... 212
Realizing that the act of observing affects the results..................213
Considering Recent Developments...........................................................215
Chewing on postmodernism.............................................................215
Keeping pace with cultural change.................................................215
Striving for Accuracy..................................................................................216
Recognizing potential research pitfalls...........................................216
Watching cultural anthropology in action......................................218
Going into the Field: Getting Prepared for
Less-Than-Ideal Conditions....................................................................219
Chapter 13: Can We Talk? Communication, Symbols,
and Language...............................................221
Exploring the Complexity of Human Language........................................222
Screeching and howling: Non-human animal
communications.............................................................................222
Contrasting non-human and human symbolism............................224
Identifying characteristics of human spoken language................227
Linking language to the mind: Tapping its true power.................229
Ready to Swear: How the Human Mind Is Hard-Wired for Language.... 230
First four months...............................................................................231
Six to twelve months.........................................................................232
12 to 18 months..................................................................................232
Table of Contents
18 to 24 months..................................................................................233
36 months and later...........................................................................233
Watching Human Language Evolve...........................................................233
Admitting our uncertainty................................................................233
Explaining language diversity..........................................................235
Making room for new theories.........................................................236
Chapter 14: Types of Types: Race and Ethnicity..................239
The Kinds of Humanity: Human Physical Variation................................239
The race card: Racial types and physical anthropology..............240
The lowdown: What anthropologists can say
for sure about human races..........................................................242
The history of racial typing..............................................................245
The grand illusion: Race, turns out, is arbitrary............................247
Why Is Everyone Different? Human Cultural Variation..........................248
Distinguishing ethnicity from race..................................................249
A common horror: Ethnic cleansing................................................250
A common delight: Ethnic identity..................................................251
Ethnic group interactions.................................................................251
Chapter 15: Guess Who s Coming to Dinner?
Identity, Family, Kinship, and Gender...........................255
Am I Cameron or a Smith ? The Scales of Human Identity...............256
Know thyself: Identity.......................................................................256
What s in a name?..............................................................................257
A Family Affair..............................................................................................257
Families of origin versus families of procreation..........................259
Incest...................................................................................................259
Marriage..............................................................................................260
Kinship..........................................................................................................261
Sex and Gender............................................................................................264
The differences between sex and gender.......................................264
Common gender roles.......................................................................265
Kinship and Gender Worldwide and through Time................................266
Among foragers..................................................................................266
Among horticulturalists....................................................................267
Among agriculturalists......................................................................268
Chapter 16: Not at the Dinner Table! Religion and Politics........269
What Is Religion?.........................................................................................270
Functions of religion..........................................................................270
Why religion is so powerful..............................................................271
The Material and Supernatural Worlds....................................................272
Ritual and Religion......................................................................................273
* * * *
)Cvîîi Anthropology For Dummies
The Organization of Supernatural Knowledge.........................................275
Shamans..............................................................................................275
Priests..................................................................................................276
The Origins of Religion...............................................................................277
Types of Religions.......................................................................................280
The Relations of Power: Politics................................................................281
I ve got the power (and I know how to use it)...............................282
Power plays: How various societies apply power.........................283
Part W: So Whaû Anthropology,
the Modern World, and j/ou.......................................285
Chapter 17: Kiss or Kill? Diversity, Conflict, and Culture..........287
The Anthropology of Conflict and Conflict Resolution..........................287
Scales and consequences of conflict...............................................289
Cultural conflict among small-scale societies................................291
Cultural conflict in larger-scale societies.......................................292
Humanity and justice.........................................................................294
Globalization and Human Culture.............................................................295
Globalization and ecological justice................................................296
Globalization and cultural assimilation..........................................297
Globalization and nativistic movements........................................297
Globalization and forced migration.................................................297
Chapter 18: Looming Disasters? From Overpopulation
to Space Debris.............................................299
The Only Constant Is Change.....................................................................299
Overpopulation............................................................................................301
The road to overpopulation.............................................................302
Hope on the horizon..........................................................................303
Climate Change............................................................................................304
Say What? The Loss of Linguistic Diversity.............................................306
Food and Water Availability/Famine.........................................................307
Disease..........................................................................................................308
Space Debris.................................................................................................309
Chapter 19: Eve and the Iceman: The Cutting Edge
of Physical Anthropology.....................................311
Molecular Anthropology.............................................................................311
How it works.......................................................................................312
How anthropologists use it...............................................................313
Why some say it doesn t work.........................................................315
Table of Contents
DNA and the Mitochondrial Eve................................................................316
Out of Africa: African diversity and extra-African similarity........317
The inevitable debates......................................................................317
Neanderthals and You: The Neanderthal Genome..................................318
The Iceman...................................................................................................319
Chapter 20: Stonehenge and You: Why Archaeology Matters......321
History Is Written by the Winners: The Importance of Archaeology ...322
Historical archaeology and written history...................................323
Commoners of ancient Egypt...........................................................324
The archaeology of American slaves..............................................325
Other important historical archaeology sites................................326
Conversation Stoppers? Archaeology and the Unknown.......................328
Why did humanity take up farming?...............................................329
How did humans go from having leaders to having rulers?.........329
Does history repeat itself?................................................................330
Part V: The Part of Tens............................................ 331
Chapter 21: Ten Things to Remember about Anthropology,
Whatever Else You Forget....................................333
We re Not Just Like Apes, We ARE Apes..................................................333
Nobody Knows Why Hominids First Walked Upright (Yet)...................333
Everyone Is in the Human Race.........................................................;.......334
Tool Use Separated Behavior from Anatomy..........................................334
Civilization Is Brand-New............................................................................335
There Are Many Ways to Be Human.........................................................335
Culture Doesn t Ride on Genes..................................................................335
Language and Metaphor Are the Keys to Human Success.....................336
Absolutely, There Are No Absolutes.........................................................336
There Is No Ladder of Progress.................................................................336
Chapter 22: Ten Great Careers for Anthropology Majors..........339
Academic Anthropology.............................................................................339
Cultural/Human Resources........................................................................340
Medical Examination...................................................................................340
Crime Scene Investigation..........................................................................340
Primate Biology............................................................................................341
Primate Ethology.........................................................................................341
Diplomacy.....................................................................................................341
Museum Work..............................................................................................341
Library Science............................................................................................342
Contract Archaeology.................................................................................342
Anthropology For Dummies
Chapter 23: Ten Great Anthropologically Themed
Movies and Books...........................................343
Once We Were Warriors (1995).................................................................343
Gorillas in the Mist: The Story of Dian Fossey (1988).............................343
Neanderthal (2005)......................................................................................344
Quest for Fire (1982)...................................................................................344
Koyaanisqatsi (1982)...................................................................................344
The Places in Between (2006)....................................................................345
Shadows of Forgotten Ancestors (1993)...................................................345
Maps and Dreams (1981; 2nd edition 2002).............................................345
We, the Navigators: The Ancient Art of Landfinding
in the Pacific (1972; 2nd edition 1998)..................................................346
Lord of the Hies (1954)...............................................................................346
Index.......................................................................347
|
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author | Smith, Cameron McPherson 1967- |
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discipline | Soziologie Sozial-/Kulturanthropologie / Empirische Kulturwissenschaft |
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id | DE-604.BV039121288 |
illustrated | Illustrated |
indexdate | 2024-07-09T23:59:24Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9780470279663 |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-024139858 |
oclc_num | 191245642 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-11 |
owner_facet | DE-11 |
physical | XX, 360 S. Ill. 24 cm |
publishDate | 2008 |
publishDateSearch | 2008 |
publishDateSort | 2008 |
publisher | Wiley |
record_format | marc |
spelling | Smith, Cameron McPherson 1967- Verfasser (DE-588)135877504 aut Anthropology for dummies by Cameron M. Smith Hoboken, N.J. Wiley 2008 XX, 360 S. Ill. 24 cm txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Includes index Explains the fundamentals of biological and cultural anthropology and tips on how to find a career in anthropology Anthropology Anthropology / Methodology Anthropologie (DE-588)4002230-4 gnd rswk-swf Ethnologie (DE-588)4078931-7 gnd rswk-swf (DE-588)4151278-9 Einführung gnd-content Anthropologie (DE-588)4002230-4 s DE-604 Ethnologie (DE-588)4078931-7 s HBZ Datenaustausch application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=024139858&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Smith, Cameron McPherson 1967- Anthropology for dummies Anthropology Anthropology / Methodology Anthropologie (DE-588)4002230-4 gnd Ethnologie (DE-588)4078931-7 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4002230-4 (DE-588)4078931-7 (DE-588)4151278-9 |
title | Anthropology for dummies |
title_auth | Anthropology for dummies |
title_exact_search | Anthropology for dummies |
title_full | Anthropology for dummies by Cameron M. Smith |
title_fullStr | Anthropology for dummies by Cameron M. Smith |
title_full_unstemmed | Anthropology for dummies by Cameron M. Smith |
title_short | Anthropology for dummies |
title_sort | anthropology for dummies |
topic | Anthropology Anthropology / Methodology Anthropologie (DE-588)4002230-4 gnd Ethnologie (DE-588)4078931-7 gnd |
topic_facet | Anthropology Anthropology / Methodology Anthropologie Ethnologie Einführung |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=024139858&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT smithcameronmcpherson anthropologyfordummies |