Applying cultural anthropology: an introductory reader
Gespeichert in:
Format: | Buch |
---|---|
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
New York
McGraw-Hill
2013
|
Ausgabe: | 9. ed. |
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis Klappentext |
Beschreibung: | XV, 303, 9, 6 S. |
ISBN: | 9780078117039 0078117038 |
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245 | 1 | 0 | |a Applying cultural anthropology |b an introductory reader |c Aaron Podolefsky ; Peter J. Brown ; Scott M. Lacy |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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adam_text | Contents
Theme
Finder
for Chapters x
To the Student
xi
To the Instructor
xiii
Introduction: Understanding Humans and Human Problems
1
Fieldwork
1
Shakespeare in the Bush
5
Laura Bohannan (Natural History,
1966)
Laura Bohannan finds great difficulty in communicating the dramatic themes (and basic story
line) of Hamlet to the
Tiv
of Nigeria. Assumptions about human motivations, morality, and the
nature of reality are embedded in a cultural context and limit the possible understanding of
the story. Great art does not necessarily transcend cultural boundaries.
2
Eating Christmas in the Kalahari
11
Richard Borshay Lee (Natural History,
1969)
When the !Kung San make fun of an ox mat the anthropologist wants to give the group for a
Christmas feast, Richard Lee learns about the important value of reciprocity in a food-foraging band.
3
Maxwell s Demons: Disenchantment in the Field
1 6
Janet Mclntosh
An anthropologist examines cultural change among the Giriama people of coastal Kenya.
Mclntosh delves so deeply into the world of the Giriama that she begins to question her
disbelief in supernatural phenomena and spirits.
Kinship and Family
4
When Brothers Share a Wife
27
Melvyn
С
Goldstein (Natural History,
1987)
Fraternal polyandry, a rare form of plural marriage, has both benefits and costs for the people
of Tibet. Given the economy and ecology of this area, the practice of polyandry has adaptive
functions.
5
How Many Fathers Are Best for a Child?
32
Meredith F. Small (Discover,
2003)
Kinship is a central topic of anthropological research, as anthropologists examine how people
use culture to create variations in understandings of human biology. This selection considers
the
Barí
of South America, whose children have one mother and several fathers.
IV
CONTENTS
To Give up on Words : Silence in Western Apache Culture
36
Keith H. Basso (Southwestern Journal of Anthropology,
1970)
Cross-cultural communication involves more than differences in language and gesture. This
sociolinguistic analysis explores the role of silence in Apache society in particular situational
contexts. There are social rules that dictate when talking is appropriate, and these rules vary
across cultures.
How Families Work: Love, Labor and Mediated Oppositions in American Domestic Ritual
46
Mark
Auslander
Recent studies show that in comparison with workers in all other industrial countries, Americans
spend more hours at work and receive less paid vacation and sick time. Domestic rituals like
weddings and holiday celebrations are one way that middle-class Americans mediate heavy work
demands with family life.
Ritual and Religion
8
Body Ritual Among the Nacirema
64
Horace Miner (American Anthropologist,
1956)
The examination and analysis of the rituals of this tribe shed light on the meaning of culture
and help us reflect on our own way of life.
9
Ritual in the Operating Room
68
Pearl Katz (Ethnology,
1981)
The domestic rituals of middle-class American society can be interpreted as a way to mediate
between two opposing parts of life
—
work and family. Family rituals evoke feelings of nostalgia
even when one family is ending and another beginning.
10
Plastic Red Rituals: There s More to That Cup Than You Think
81
Krystal
D Costa
Examining party cups through the lens of cultural anthropology shows that your plastic cup
does more than hold your beverage. In fact, selecting the correct cups might just save your
next party!
11
The Adaptive Value of Religious Ritual
85
Richard Sosis (American Scientist,
2004)
Religious rituals often require a good deal of time, energy, and even pain. Are there social
benefits for society of having such demanding rituals? Are rituals good or bad for us?
Food and Agriculture
12
The Worst Mistake in the History of the Human Race
92
Jared Diamond (Discover,
1987)
The agricultural revolution has long been considered one of the most important transforma¬
tions in human history. But was it for better or for worse?
13
The Forgotten Population? Youth, Food Insecurity, and Rising Global Food Prices
96
Craig Hadley, Tefera Belachew, David
Lindström,
and Fasil Tessema
By applying anthropology to understand complex problems such as the scale and scope of
food insecurity among Ethiopian youth, policy makers and nongovernmental organizations
can be more effective partners with communities and countries fighting extreme hunger.
VI
CONTENTS
14
Chinese Table Manners: You Are How You Eat
107
Eugene Cooper (Human Organization,
1986)
Knowing good manners from bad is extremely important in cross-cultural encounters.
The author heightens our sensitivity by describing Chinese table manners.
Gender and Sexuality
15
Talk in the Intimate Relationship: His and Hers
114
Deborah
Tannen
Male-female conversation and contrasting communication styles could be to blame when
long-term relationships fail. Could learning how to read cross-sex, nonverbal cues save one
of your relationships?
16
Measuring Up to Barbie: Ideals of the Feminine Body in Popular Culture
122
Jacqueline
Urla
and Alan
С
Swedlund
Even children s toys like the Barbie doll shape cultural ideals of women s beauty. In this selection,
the authors discuss Barbie s history and use anthropometry to show just how impossible her ideal
is for women to attain.
17
Do Muslim Women Really Need Saving? Anthropological Reflections on Cultural
Relativism and Its Others
133
Lila Abu-Lughod
(American Anthropologist,
2002)
One of the rationales used for war in Afghanistan after September
11,2001,
was the liberation
of Afghani women from the oppression of strict Muslim orthodoxy. The Western ethnocentrism
of that rationale has obscured more complex historical and political dimensions of violence in
Afghanistan.
18
Gay Marriage and Anthropology
140
Linda S. Stone (Anthropology News,
2004)
When one looks at cross-cultural analyses of marriage, the only universal to be found is
that people from different parts of the world define marriage in unique ways. Cultural
diversity and New Reproductive Technologies such as surrogate motherhood and in-vitro
fertilization reveal that marriage is a social construction, not a human universal based on
biology.
19
Strange Country This : An Introduction to North American Gender Diversity
143
Will Roscoe (Changing Ones,
1998)
Unlike contemporary terms such as gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender, the term two-spirit
represents people whose societies respectfully understand them as both male and female. This
selection describes the two-spirit tradition in Native North America including how two-spirit
people differed from region to region.
Medical Anthropology
20
It Takes a Village Healer Can Traditional Medicine Remedy
Africa s AIDS Crisis?
151
Matthew Steinglass
The ever-growing popularity of medical anthropology is outpaced only by the creative appli¬
cations of this mixed-methods approach. In this selection, the author examines the impact of
traditional healers in the fight against HIV/AIDS in Africa.
CONTENTS
vil
21
The Viral Superhighway
160
George
Armelagos
(The Sciences,
1998)
Looking at the big picture of health and culture across human history, the author shows
how technological changes have brought about changes in patterns of health and disease. With
globalization, are we facing a future of new and uncontrollable epidemics?
22
Culture and the Evolution of Obesity
166
Peter
J
.
Brown (Human Nature,
1991)
Why do people get fat? Is it cultural or is it in our genes
—
or, as with most things, is it some of
each? This selection provides a cross-cultural and evolutionary analysis of how both biological
and cultural factors in obesity evolved.
23
Pocahontas Goes to the Clinic: Popular Culture as Lingua Franca in a Cultural
Borderland
177
Cheryl Mattingly (American Anthropologist,
2006)
Establishing effective communication and understanding between patients and caregivers
is complicated by ethnic divisions, differences in language, and racial/ethnic stereotyping.
Nonetheless, creative clinicians have found ways to bridge these differences through the use
of global icons like Disney characters and Spider Man.
Money and Work
24
Anthropologist Takes Inner-City Children on Shopping Sprees
187
Elizabeth Chin
In this selection, anthropologist Elizabeth Chin develops a unique way to conduct anthropo¬
logical research with children; she takes them on
$20
shopping sprees. How would you spend
your
$20,
and what would your purchases say about you?
25
Just Another Job?: The Commodification of Domestic Labor
200
Bridget Anderson
Millions of people from poor countries travel across land and sea seeking work in wealthier
countries. Globalization creates challenges that transnational migrants face as they try to sup¬
port their own families by performing difficult and sometimes demeaning work in the homes
of strangers.
26
Conflict and Confluence in Advertising Meetings
206
RobertJ.
Morais
(Human Organization,
2007)
Anthropology can help businesses reach consumers and develop successful new products,
but it can also help business executives and account managers understand and improve their
relationships with employees, clients, and each other.
Law and Conflict
27
Law, Custom, and Crimes against Women: The Problem of Dowry Death in India
218
John van
Willigen
and
V. C. Channa
(Human Organization,
1991)
Dowry-related violence against women in northern India is a serious and perplexing problem,
difficult to explain with an anthropological functionalist approach. Economic transformations
have negatively affected the status of women and have intensified economic pressures on
families to provide a dowry at the marriage of daughters.
viii CONTENTS
28
The
«pelle
Moot
229
James
L
Gibbsjr. (Africa,
1963)
The informal moot, a method of resolving disputes among the Kpelle of Liberia, is
significantly different from our court system. It emphasizes the mending of social relations
between the disputing parties; the process of the hearing is therapeutic. The moot is a useful
alternative model for settling disputes in our own society.
29
Sacred Barriers to Conflict Resolution
237
Scott Atran, Robert Axelrod, Richard Davis (Science,
2007)
As international conflicts, religious fundamentalism, and economic disparity continue
to divide our planet, symbolic concessions and national apologies are essential building
blocks to peace. In this selection Atran, Axelrod, and Davis discuss the role of national
apologies as precursors to reconciliation in the enduring conflict between Palestine and
Israel.
30
Army Enlists Anthropology in War Zones
240
David Rohde (New York Times,
2007)
In hopes of helping U.S. soldiers better understand the cultural landscape in Iraq and
Afghanistan, a
$41
million military project places anthropologists in combat zones to advise
and help develop counterinsurgency operations.
31
Contemporary Warfare in the New Guinea Highlands
243
Aaron
Podoleßky
(Ethnology,
1984)
Intertribal warfare flares up in the highlands of Papua New Guinea even after decades of
relative peace. To understand why, anthropologists focus on changes in the local economic
system that have, in turn, changed marriage patterns.
Environment, Poverty, and Development
32
Are the Desert People Winning? 2S2
Robert Sapolsky
If you could create your own version of an ideal society, what would it look like? This chapter
argues that adopting a desert dweller culture versus a forest dweller culture can predict
your society s religion, gender norms, and even your propensity to violence.
33
Two Rights Make a Wrong: Indigenous Peoples Versus Environmental Protection
Agencies
256
Richard Reed
Combining environmental and indigenous agendas could be an important step toward
advancing both struggles
—
unless it backfires. Richard Reed, a cultural anthropologist who
works with Paraguay s indigenous
Guaraní
communities, helped create a forest reserve that
would protect native peoples rights to their traditional lands. Now these communities are
denied access to the reserve.
34
Moral Fibers of Farmer Cooperatives: Creating Poverty and Wealth with Cotton
in Southern Mali
264
Scott M. Lacy
(2008)
Development officials promote cotton production as a means to combat endemic poverty in
rural Malian communities, but cotton farming can create poverty as well. When world cotton
prices are high, cotton-producing countries like Mali may reap financial benefits, but when
prices fall, small-scale cotton farmers pay the price.
CONTENTS
IX
35 Family
Planning
Outreach and Credit Programs in Rural Bangladesh
272
Sidney Ruth
Schuier
and Syed M. Hashemi (Human Organization,
1995)
A Grameen Bank program that provides loans for poor women in rural Bangladesh empowers
women by enhancing their economic role in society. One of the consequences is an increased
use of contraceptives.
Globalization and Culture Change
36
The Search for Sustainable Markets: The Promise and Failures of Fair Trade
279
Julia Smith {Culture
&
Agriculture,
2007)
In this selection, the author applies anthropological methods and understanding to see how
Fair Trade impacts different farmers in different ways. While Fair Trade coffee production
improves the lives of some coffee farmers, it may not serve all small-scale farmers equally.
37
Globalization from the Ground Up
289
David Crawford
A fresh perspective on globalization from the Atlas Mountains in Morocco presents a unique
behind-the-scenes account of how cultural anthropologists work tirelessly to make sense of
their study communities.
38
The Price of Progress
295
John H. Bodley (Victims of Progress,
1999)
Economic development, sometimes called progress, can bring about unintended social
and medical consequences, especially for marginalized tribal peoples. New disease burdens,
ecological degradation, and increased discrimination are among the hidden costs of economic
change for many people.
Glossary G-1
Index
1-1
The ninth edition of Applying Cultural Anthropology: An Introductory Reader is a collection of
articles that provide compelling examples of applied research in cultural anthropology. In this
age of globalization and increased cultural intolerance, the basic messages of public anthropology
are more important than ever. This new edition offers ten new readings that refer to contemporary
social issues such as religious belief, work and family, social class, food production, relationships,
consumerism, the effects of climate change on culture, and globalization.
What instructors are saying:
My students report that they really like the text. They like both the pieces themselves and the
introductory summaries of the pieces. The book, designed as a reader, is much more accessible,
enjoyable, [and| informative than a standard textbook.
Sarah Lamb,
Brandeis
University
This text is designed to present the ways in which anthropologists are actively engaged in
helping people to address the modern issues that stem from differences in the ways humans
interact with the world.
Sarah
Sportman.
University of Connecticut
This text provides both scholarly and popular articles about a variety of topics and cultures
around the world that highlights the significance of anthropology in solving practical problems
and understanding everyday life.
Rosami Bar,
Caldwell College
ISBN
978-0-07-811703-9
MHID
0-07-811703-8
.
Hilt
Compontes
Connect
Me Learn
Graw Succeed
Hill
|
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dewey-full | 306 |
dewey-hundreds | 300 - Social sciences |
dewey-ones | 306 - Culture and institutions |
dewey-raw | 306 |
dewey-search | 306 |
dewey-sort | 3306 |
dewey-tens | 300 - Social sciences |
discipline | Soziologie Sozial-/Kulturanthropologie / Empirische Kulturwissenschaft |
edition | 9. ed. |
format | Book |
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spelling | Applying cultural anthropology an introductory reader Aaron Podolefsky ; Peter J. Brown ; Scott M. Lacy 9. ed. New York McGraw-Hill 2013 XV, 303, 9, 6 S. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Ethnology Applied anthropology Ethnologie (DE-588)4078931-7 gnd rswk-swf Kulturanthropologie (DE-588)4133903-4 gnd rswk-swf (DE-588)4151278-9 Einführung gnd-content Ethnologie (DE-588)4078931-7 s DE-604 Kulturanthropologie (DE-588)4133903-4 s 1\p DE-604 Podolefsky, Aaron Sonstige oth Brown, Peter J. 1951- Sonstige (DE-588)128976918 oth Lacy, Scott M. Sonstige oth Digitalisierung UB Bayreuth application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=024519382&sequence=000003&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis Digitalisierung UB Bayreuth application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=024519382&sequence=000004&line_number=0002&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Klappentext 1\p cgwrk 20201028 DE-101 https://d-nb.info/provenance/plan#cgwrk |
spellingShingle | Applying cultural anthropology an introductory reader Ethnology Applied anthropology Ethnologie (DE-588)4078931-7 gnd Kulturanthropologie (DE-588)4133903-4 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4078931-7 (DE-588)4133903-4 (DE-588)4151278-9 |
title | Applying cultural anthropology an introductory reader |
title_auth | Applying cultural anthropology an introductory reader |
title_exact_search | Applying cultural anthropology an introductory reader |
title_full | Applying cultural anthropology an introductory reader Aaron Podolefsky ; Peter J. Brown ; Scott M. Lacy |
title_fullStr | Applying cultural anthropology an introductory reader Aaron Podolefsky ; Peter J. Brown ; Scott M. Lacy |
title_full_unstemmed | Applying cultural anthropology an introductory reader Aaron Podolefsky ; Peter J. Brown ; Scott M. Lacy |
title_short | Applying cultural anthropology |
title_sort | applying cultural anthropology an introductory reader |
title_sub | an introductory reader |
topic | Ethnology Applied anthropology Ethnologie (DE-588)4078931-7 gnd Kulturanthropologie (DE-588)4133903-4 gnd |
topic_facet | Ethnology Applied anthropology Ethnologie Kulturanthropologie Einführung |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=024519382&sequence=000003&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=024519382&sequence=000004&line_number=0002&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT podolefskyaaron applyingculturalanthropologyanintroductoryreader AT brownpeterj applyingculturalanthropologyanintroductoryreader AT lacyscottm applyingculturalanthropologyanintroductoryreader |