2
Most read
4
Most read
6
Most read
The Four Fields of Anthropology Culture as the Central Concept
Culture and the Four Fields of Anthropology Anthropology is centered around culture Next question: what do cultures have to do with the following? Physical anthropology Linguistics Archaeology This is where the definition of anthropology itself comes in
So How Do We Define Anthropology? Your syllabus: “The Holistic and Comparative Study of Humankind” Holistic:  Asks two questions: Ethnographic Holism : Asks whether, and if so how, all parts of a culture fit together This has already been covered under “Culture is Patterned or Integrated” Disciplinary Holism:  Asks how all the four subfields of anthropology fit together; this, we cover next. Comparative Method:  Tries to answer the questions of why cultures are both diverse and similar We cover both the disciplinary holistic and comparative strategies in turn
Disciplinary Holism and the Four Fields of  Anthropology Disciplinary Holism: This method a sks why we include the following under “anthropology   Cultural Anthropology:  The comparative study of cultures around the world Physical Anthropology:  The comparative study of human attributes, past and present Linguistics:  The study of spoken language, a distinctly human trait Archaeology:  The comparative study of past cultures through its material cultural remains All fields involve a question about culture: where it came from, what it entails, what its consequences are
Defining Cultural Anthropology: Research Techniques  It involves the study of mostly non-Western cultures Basic technique involves fieldwork You will be practicing virtual fieldwork using EthnoQuest Sometimes, ethics are involved, as this cartoon implies A fair question: just what  do   anthropologists use their information for?
Defining Cultural Anthropology: Topics Central concern is  kinship , because marriage and family are our first institutions Reflected by this three generations of Native American females (upper left) Also includes  technology , from hunting to housebuilding Economic Anthropology : how goods and services are produced and distributed Political Anthropology : The study of power and social control (lower left) Other areas : supernatural beliefs, psychology, culture change, arts and oral tradition
Defining Physical Anthropology The studies of past and present human forms Comparative Primate Anatomy:  How similar or different we are from the monkeys and apes Fossil Hominins:  How we evolved from  Australopithecus  (“Lucy,” depicted in cartoon) to  Homo Cultural Capacity:  Defines how we acquired ability to speak, make tools, walk on two feet Human Variation:  Study of so-called races—a present concern Forensic Science:  Tracing evidence of criminal activity
Tying Physical Anthropology to Culture Our brain:  Source of our language Source of our tool-making ability Our Lungs and Mouth:  Our ability to speak Our Arms and Hands:  Our ability to make and use tools Our Bipedal Skeleton:  Our ability to stand, walk, and ability to do all of the above
Defining Linguistics The study of spoken language around the world Focuses on phones (speech sounds) and phonemes (sound units that carry language) Looks at word and sentence formation Examines how children learn to speak—in one-word sentences! (See cartoon) Relates language to culture
Tying Linguistics to Culture We learn everything through language: Even the blind and deaf (Helen Keller and her mentor Ann Sullivan, upper left photo) They use Braille and sign language to communicate We can think of things not tangible: math equations (lower left), things not present, things nonexistent We can produce new words when necessary, from blip to iPod
Defining Archaeology Reconstruction of past cultures:  focus is on techniques analyzing remains of material culture Looks at artifacts:  portable objects from tools to Venus sculptures Looks at structures:  Huts to pyramids Excavations destroy everything:  Objects have to be measured exactly where found before removal
Tying Archaeology to Culture Archaeology is primarily about cultural remains of human societies (Even stone tools are hard to identify, as Gary Larson tells us) Human and prehuman physical remains are also important  (Did this Neanderthal mate with that  human female? Stay tuned! Both archaeologists and physical anthropologists would like to know.) Comparison of present with past cultures is also essential
Anthropology and other Social Sciences By their nature, economics, political science, sociology are all specialized They create specialized perceptions of humankind Economics  focuses on economic man (and woman) Political science  is about humans hungry for power Psychology  is about human with various drives: sexual, hunger, prestige Sociology  is about social humans
Recall the Fable of the Six Blind Men Defining an Elephant Each man feels a part of the elephant And describes his take on what it is like
The First Two Parts of an Elephant The first man feels the side of the elephant.  He calls it a wall The second man feels one of the elephant’s tusks. He compares it to a spear
Two More Parts of an Elephant The third man feels the trunk. He then calls it a snake The fourth man then feels the elephant’s legs.  Lo and behold, he says, here we have a tree
Last Two Parts of an Elephant The fifth man touches the ears. He then says that it is like a big fan Finally, the sixth man grabs the tail He proclaims “I see (though he’s blind) it’s very like a rope” Now the argument begins. . .
What do we get? A Metaphorical Elephant And so like six blind men Specialists dispute “loud and long” Though each is  partly in the right,  All are in the wrong And so we get a caricature of the social sciences Like this (reconstructed) elephant.
Economics and Its Limits Economics posits an “economic man” whose aim is to maximize his wealth and to get the most out of his assets But peoples of many cultures are not that obsessed with wealth This Ache (Indonesian) man is actually sharing the  meat he just hunted Does he look like economic man to you?
Political Science and Its Limits Political man lusts for power, even at the point of a sword (or barrel of a gun) Some peoples curb others’ power. For example, drum song duels kept Eskimos from taking over the band
The Bottom Line of Holism Anthropology concerns all aspects of society How do the economy, social control, myths, and all else fit in with the culture as a whole. This will be the central question as we examine each subfield of cultural anthropology
Second, Anthropology is Comparative If we are to understand how cultures function We have to  compare  them All science involves comparison Take families In Non-western societies, people rely on family and its extensions for all social functions  Such as this Vietnamese immigrant family in Canada These include education, economic needs, social control In Western societies, families are nuclear and thereby play fewer important roles Schools educate the young, workplaces are the sources of livelihood, and governments exercise social control
Anthropology and Other Disciplines Most other social sciences specialize in industrial societies:  Economics:  Focus is on industrial societies Sociology:  Social relations in industrial societies Psychology:  Study of hang-ups in industrial societies Anthropology  provides data on all these aspects cross  all  cultures around the world. Any valid social explanation  has  to address all cultures, not just industrial ones
Conclusion: Culture, Holism, and Comparison Basic Question:  Why are People so Different? This is a question about  culture Culture is learned, symbolic, shared, integrated, and adaptive It involves questions of how parts of a culture fit—a holistic issue of ethnography It involves questions of what every subfield has to say about culture—a disciplinary holism It demands an explanation of cultures—a comparative and therefore scientific question.

More Related Content

PPT
Introduction To Anthropology, Online Version
PPT
Introduction to Anthropology
PPTX
Kinship, marriage and the household
PPT
History of anthropology
PPTX
Anthropology
PPT
Into to anthropology
PPTX
The four fields of anthropology
PPTX
Module 3 anthropology and the study of culture
Introduction To Anthropology, Online Version
Introduction to Anthropology
Kinship, marriage and the household
History of anthropology
Anthropology
Into to anthropology
The four fields of anthropology
Module 3 anthropology and the study of culture

What's hot (20)

PPTX
Chapter 3: Looking back at human bio cultural and social evolution
POTX
Culture
PPT
Human Biological and Cultural Evolution.
DOCX
Chapter 1: Introduction to Anthropology
PPTX
Structural functionalism
PPTX
ECONOMIC INSTITUTION
PPT
Economic institution
PPTX
UCSP LESSON 2 Society and Culture.pptx
PPTX
Tracing back the human biocultural and social evolution
PPTX
Significance of Studying Culture, Society, and Politics
PPTX
Ethnicity and race
PPTX
Anthro ppt
PPTX
Rational choice
PPTX
What is-the-rational-choice-theory
PPTX
Political ideologies
PPTX
Historical particularism
PPTX
Anthropological Theories and Theoretical Orientations
PPTX
Positivist Social Science
PPTX
Structural-Functionalism-Theory.pptx
Chapter 3: Looking back at human bio cultural and social evolution
Culture
Human Biological and Cultural Evolution.
Chapter 1: Introduction to Anthropology
Structural functionalism
ECONOMIC INSTITUTION
Economic institution
UCSP LESSON 2 Society and Culture.pptx
Tracing back the human biocultural and social evolution
Significance of Studying Culture, Society, and Politics
Ethnicity and race
Anthro ppt
Rational choice
What is-the-rational-choice-theory
Political ideologies
Historical particularism
Anthropological Theories and Theoretical Orientations
Positivist Social Science
Structural-Functionalism-Theory.pptx
Ad

Similar to Four Fields in Anthropology (20)

PPT
Four fields in anthropology
PPT
Introduction to Anthropology.
PPT
Anthropology.ppt
PPT
Introduction to physical anthropology
PPT
Introduction to Physical Anthropology
PDF
UCSP-Anthropology-ppt. FIRST QUARTERRRRR
DOCX
Using the modules below, answer the following essay questions.docx
PDF
PPT
ANTHRO -Anthropology draws knowledge and methods from any discipline that can...
PDF
Sujay Anthropological Economics FINAL FINAL FINAL FINAL FINAL.pdf
PDF
Sujay Anthropological Economics FINAL FINAL FINAL FINAL FINAL.pdf
PDF
Sujay Theories of Cultural change FINAL FINAL FINAL FINAL FINAL.pdf
PDF
Sujay theories of cultural change final final final final final
DOCX
These are modules you can also use for reference1. What Is An.docx
PPT
Culture theory review of theories
PPT
Culture theory review of theories
PPT
Anth1 Wk1 Pt2
PPTX
Anthropology
PPTX
Anthropology and the study of culture.pptx
DOC
Anthropology
Four fields in anthropology
Introduction to Anthropology.
Anthropology.ppt
Introduction to physical anthropology
Introduction to Physical Anthropology
UCSP-Anthropology-ppt. FIRST QUARTERRRRR
Using the modules below, answer the following essay questions.docx
ANTHRO -Anthropology draws knowledge and methods from any discipline that can...
Sujay Anthropological Economics FINAL FINAL FINAL FINAL FINAL.pdf
Sujay Anthropological Economics FINAL FINAL FINAL FINAL FINAL.pdf
Sujay Theories of Cultural change FINAL FINAL FINAL FINAL FINAL.pdf
Sujay theories of cultural change final final final final final
These are modules you can also use for reference1. What Is An.docx
Culture theory review of theories
Culture theory review of theories
Anth1 Wk1 Pt2
Anthropology
Anthropology and the study of culture.pptx
Anthropology
Ad

More from PaulVMcDowell (20)

PPT
Human biological and cultural evolution 2
PPT
Human biological and cultural evolution
PPT
Excavation Techniques and Analysis
PPT
Fossil Hominins: From Ardipithecus to Homo
PPT
Linguistics: Descriptive and Anthropological
PPT
How to Get the Most Out of Anthropology
PPT
Primate Social Behavior
PPT
HUman Biological and Cultural Evolutioj
PPT
Defining Culture
PPT
An Introduction to Anthropology
PPT
Early Medieval Europe
PPT
Modern Homo Sapiens: Contemporary Problems
PPT
Recent African Origins or Regional Evolution?
PPT
Classical Rome: Rise, Fluorescence, and Fall
PPT
Excavation Techniques
PPT
Fossil Hominins: From Australopithecus to Homo
PPT
Greece and the Arts
PPT
Mesopotamia and the Near East: Foundation of Western Culture
PPT
Mesopotalia and the Near East: The Roots of Western Culture
PPT
Egypt: The Kingdom Along the Nile
Human biological and cultural evolution 2
Human biological and cultural evolution
Excavation Techniques and Analysis
Fossil Hominins: From Ardipithecus to Homo
Linguistics: Descriptive and Anthropological
How to Get the Most Out of Anthropology
Primate Social Behavior
HUman Biological and Cultural Evolutioj
Defining Culture
An Introduction to Anthropology
Early Medieval Europe
Modern Homo Sapiens: Contemporary Problems
Recent African Origins or Regional Evolution?
Classical Rome: Rise, Fluorescence, and Fall
Excavation Techniques
Fossil Hominins: From Australopithecus to Homo
Greece and the Arts
Mesopotamia and the Near East: Foundation of Western Culture
Mesopotalia and the Near East: The Roots of Western Culture
Egypt: The Kingdom Along the Nile

Recently uploaded (20)

PDF
Planning-an-Audit-A-How-To-Guide-Checklist-WP.pdf
PDF
Advancing precision in air quality forecasting through machine learning integ...
PDF
Transform-Your-Supply-Chain-with-AI-Driven-Quality-Engineering.pdf
PDF
“A New Era of 3D Sensing: Transforming Industries and Creating Opportunities,...
PDF
Rapid Prototyping: A lecture on prototyping techniques for interface design
PDF
Early detection and classification of bone marrow changes in lumbar vertebrae...
PDF
Transform-Your-Streaming-Platform-with-AI-Driven-Quality-Engineering.pdf
PDF
Co-training pseudo-labeling for text classification with support vector machi...
PDF
The-2025-Engineering-Revolution-AI-Quality-and-DevOps-Convergence.pdf
PPTX
Configure Apache Mutual Authentication
PPTX
MuleSoft-Compete-Deck for midddleware integrations
PDF
IT-ITes Industry bjjbnkmkhkhknbmhkhmjhjkhj
PPTX
GROUP4NURSINGINFORMATICSREPORT-2 PRESENTATION
PDF
sbt 2.0: go big (Scala Days 2025 edition)
PDF
Data Virtualization in Action: Scaling APIs and Apps with FME
PDF
MENA-ECEONOMIC-CONTEXT-VC MENA-ECEONOMIC
PDF
Comparative analysis of machine learning models for fake news detection in so...
PDF
The-Future-of-Automotive-Quality-is-Here-AI-Driven-Engineering.pdf
PDF
Accessing-Finance-in-Jordan-MENA 2024 2025.pdf
PDF
Produktkatalog für HOBO Datenlogger, Wetterstationen, Sensoren, Software und ...
Planning-an-Audit-A-How-To-Guide-Checklist-WP.pdf
Advancing precision in air quality forecasting through machine learning integ...
Transform-Your-Supply-Chain-with-AI-Driven-Quality-Engineering.pdf
“A New Era of 3D Sensing: Transforming Industries and Creating Opportunities,...
Rapid Prototyping: A lecture on prototyping techniques for interface design
Early detection and classification of bone marrow changes in lumbar vertebrae...
Transform-Your-Streaming-Platform-with-AI-Driven-Quality-Engineering.pdf
Co-training pseudo-labeling for text classification with support vector machi...
The-2025-Engineering-Revolution-AI-Quality-and-DevOps-Convergence.pdf
Configure Apache Mutual Authentication
MuleSoft-Compete-Deck for midddleware integrations
IT-ITes Industry bjjbnkmkhkhknbmhkhmjhjkhj
GROUP4NURSINGINFORMATICSREPORT-2 PRESENTATION
sbt 2.0: go big (Scala Days 2025 edition)
Data Virtualization in Action: Scaling APIs and Apps with FME
MENA-ECEONOMIC-CONTEXT-VC MENA-ECEONOMIC
Comparative analysis of machine learning models for fake news detection in so...
The-Future-of-Automotive-Quality-is-Here-AI-Driven-Engineering.pdf
Accessing-Finance-in-Jordan-MENA 2024 2025.pdf
Produktkatalog für HOBO Datenlogger, Wetterstationen, Sensoren, Software und ...

Four Fields in Anthropology

  • 1. The Four Fields of Anthropology Culture as the Central Concept
  • 2. Culture and the Four Fields of Anthropology Anthropology is centered around culture Next question: what do cultures have to do with the following? Physical anthropology Linguistics Archaeology This is where the definition of anthropology itself comes in
  • 3. So How Do We Define Anthropology? Your syllabus: “The Holistic and Comparative Study of Humankind” Holistic: Asks two questions: Ethnographic Holism : Asks whether, and if so how, all parts of a culture fit together This has already been covered under “Culture is Patterned or Integrated” Disciplinary Holism: Asks how all the four subfields of anthropology fit together; this, we cover next. Comparative Method: Tries to answer the questions of why cultures are both diverse and similar We cover both the disciplinary holistic and comparative strategies in turn
  • 4. Disciplinary Holism and the Four Fields of Anthropology Disciplinary Holism: This method a sks why we include the following under “anthropology Cultural Anthropology: The comparative study of cultures around the world Physical Anthropology: The comparative study of human attributes, past and present Linguistics: The study of spoken language, a distinctly human trait Archaeology: The comparative study of past cultures through its material cultural remains All fields involve a question about culture: where it came from, what it entails, what its consequences are
  • 5. Defining Cultural Anthropology: Research Techniques It involves the study of mostly non-Western cultures Basic technique involves fieldwork You will be practicing virtual fieldwork using EthnoQuest Sometimes, ethics are involved, as this cartoon implies A fair question: just what do anthropologists use their information for?
  • 6. Defining Cultural Anthropology: Topics Central concern is kinship , because marriage and family are our first institutions Reflected by this three generations of Native American females (upper left) Also includes technology , from hunting to housebuilding Economic Anthropology : how goods and services are produced and distributed Political Anthropology : The study of power and social control (lower left) Other areas : supernatural beliefs, psychology, culture change, arts and oral tradition
  • 7. Defining Physical Anthropology The studies of past and present human forms Comparative Primate Anatomy: How similar or different we are from the monkeys and apes Fossil Hominins: How we evolved from Australopithecus (“Lucy,” depicted in cartoon) to Homo Cultural Capacity: Defines how we acquired ability to speak, make tools, walk on two feet Human Variation: Study of so-called races—a present concern Forensic Science: Tracing evidence of criminal activity
  • 8. Tying Physical Anthropology to Culture Our brain: Source of our language Source of our tool-making ability Our Lungs and Mouth: Our ability to speak Our Arms and Hands: Our ability to make and use tools Our Bipedal Skeleton: Our ability to stand, walk, and ability to do all of the above
  • 9. Defining Linguistics The study of spoken language around the world Focuses on phones (speech sounds) and phonemes (sound units that carry language) Looks at word and sentence formation Examines how children learn to speak—in one-word sentences! (See cartoon) Relates language to culture
  • 10. Tying Linguistics to Culture We learn everything through language: Even the blind and deaf (Helen Keller and her mentor Ann Sullivan, upper left photo) They use Braille and sign language to communicate We can think of things not tangible: math equations (lower left), things not present, things nonexistent We can produce new words when necessary, from blip to iPod
  • 11. Defining Archaeology Reconstruction of past cultures: focus is on techniques analyzing remains of material culture Looks at artifacts: portable objects from tools to Venus sculptures Looks at structures: Huts to pyramids Excavations destroy everything: Objects have to be measured exactly where found before removal
  • 12. Tying Archaeology to Culture Archaeology is primarily about cultural remains of human societies (Even stone tools are hard to identify, as Gary Larson tells us) Human and prehuman physical remains are also important (Did this Neanderthal mate with that human female? Stay tuned! Both archaeologists and physical anthropologists would like to know.) Comparison of present with past cultures is also essential
  • 13. Anthropology and other Social Sciences By their nature, economics, political science, sociology are all specialized They create specialized perceptions of humankind Economics focuses on economic man (and woman) Political science is about humans hungry for power Psychology is about human with various drives: sexual, hunger, prestige Sociology is about social humans
  • 14. Recall the Fable of the Six Blind Men Defining an Elephant Each man feels a part of the elephant And describes his take on what it is like
  • 15. The First Two Parts of an Elephant The first man feels the side of the elephant. He calls it a wall The second man feels one of the elephant’s tusks. He compares it to a spear
  • 16. Two More Parts of an Elephant The third man feels the trunk. He then calls it a snake The fourth man then feels the elephant’s legs. Lo and behold, he says, here we have a tree
  • 17. Last Two Parts of an Elephant The fifth man touches the ears. He then says that it is like a big fan Finally, the sixth man grabs the tail He proclaims “I see (though he’s blind) it’s very like a rope” Now the argument begins. . .
  • 18. What do we get? A Metaphorical Elephant And so like six blind men Specialists dispute “loud and long” Though each is partly in the right, All are in the wrong And so we get a caricature of the social sciences Like this (reconstructed) elephant.
  • 19. Economics and Its Limits Economics posits an “economic man” whose aim is to maximize his wealth and to get the most out of his assets But peoples of many cultures are not that obsessed with wealth This Ache (Indonesian) man is actually sharing the meat he just hunted Does he look like economic man to you?
  • 20. Political Science and Its Limits Political man lusts for power, even at the point of a sword (or barrel of a gun) Some peoples curb others’ power. For example, drum song duels kept Eskimos from taking over the band
  • 21. The Bottom Line of Holism Anthropology concerns all aspects of society How do the economy, social control, myths, and all else fit in with the culture as a whole. This will be the central question as we examine each subfield of cultural anthropology
  • 22. Second, Anthropology is Comparative If we are to understand how cultures function We have to compare them All science involves comparison Take families In Non-western societies, people rely on family and its extensions for all social functions Such as this Vietnamese immigrant family in Canada These include education, economic needs, social control In Western societies, families are nuclear and thereby play fewer important roles Schools educate the young, workplaces are the sources of livelihood, and governments exercise social control
  • 23. Anthropology and Other Disciplines Most other social sciences specialize in industrial societies: Economics: Focus is on industrial societies Sociology: Social relations in industrial societies Psychology: Study of hang-ups in industrial societies Anthropology provides data on all these aspects cross all cultures around the world. Any valid social explanation has to address all cultures, not just industrial ones
  • 24. Conclusion: Culture, Holism, and Comparison Basic Question: Why are People so Different? This is a question about culture Culture is learned, symbolic, shared, integrated, and adaptive It involves questions of how parts of a culture fit—a holistic issue of ethnography It involves questions of what every subfield has to say about culture—a disciplinary holism It demands an explanation of cultures—a comparative and therefore scientific question.