Anthropology is the study of humans, their origins, development, behavior, and culture. It has 5 subdisciplines: archaeology, cultural anthropology, linguistic anthropology, physical anthropology, and applied anthropology. Culture refers to the beliefs, values, and behaviors that members of a society share. It is learned and influences biology. While culture helps humans adapt, it can also sometimes be maladaptive. Culture is always changing in response to environmental and social pressures.
Anthropology is the study of humans, their origins, development, behavior, and culture. It has 5 subdisciplines: archaeology, cultural anthropology, linguistic anthropology, physical anthropology, and applied anthropology. Culture refers to the beliefs, values, and behaviors that members of a society share. It is learned and influences biology. While culture helps humans adapt, it can also sometimes be maladaptive. Culture is always changing in response to environmental and social pressures.
Anthropology is the study of humans, their origins, development, behavior, and culture. It has 5 subdisciplines: archaeology, cultural anthropology, linguistic anthropology, physical anthropology, and applied anthropology. Culture refers to the beliefs, values, and behaviors that members of a society share. It is learned and influences biology. While culture helps humans adapt, it can also sometimes be maladaptive. Culture is always changing in response to environmental and social pressures.
Anthropology is the study of humans, their origins, development, behavior, and culture. It has 5 subdisciplines: archaeology, cultural anthropology, linguistic anthropology, physical anthropology, and applied anthropology. Culture refers to the beliefs, values, and behaviors that members of a society share. It is learned and influences biology. While culture helps humans adapt, it can also sometimes be maladaptive. Culture is always changing in response to environmental and social pressures.
LESSON 3 INTRODUCTION TO ANTHROPOLOGY Humans studying humans. This is the field of anthropology. Anthropology promotes a holistic study of humans. Derived from two Greek words antropos (human) and logos (study).
As such, anthropology can be defined as “the
study of people-their origins and their development, his works, behavior and values in time and space.’’ The five subdisciplines of anthropology: 1. Archaeology examines the remains of ancient and historical human populations to promote an understanding of how humans have adapted to their environment and developed. 2. Cultural anthropology promotes the study of a society’s culture through their belief systems, practices and possessions. It studies the social and political organization of a particular groups and also the secrets of the society and all other forms of cultural behavior. 3. Linguistic anthropology examines the language of a group of people and its relation to their culture on how the language affect the culture and vice-versa. 4. Physical anthropology looks into the biological development of humans and their contemporary variation. 5.Applied anthropology attempts to solve contemporary problems through the application of theories and approaches of the discipline. Tristes Tropiques is one of the classic studies in anthropology. It was made by Claude Levi-Strauss, a french anthropologist. Philippe Bourgois a professor of anthropology at the University of Pennsylvania, studied the lives of street-level drug dealers. • KEY INFORMANTS are individuals in a society who have significant knowledge on the topic being studied by the anthropologist. CULTURE • It refers to everything that a person learns as a member of a society. • Complex whole which includes knowledge, beliefs, art, laws, morals, customs, and any Culture is everything It is what a person has, does, and thinks as part of society. TYPES OF CULTURE: 1. Material culture includes all the tangible and visible parts of culture. 2. Nonmaterial culture includes all the intangible parts of culture, which consist of values, ideas, and knowledge. Culture is learned Culture is a set of beliefs, attitudes, and practices that an individual learns through his or her family, school, church and other social institutions. ENCULTURATION the process of learning your own culture. ACCULTURATION culture can be modified to accommodate desirable traits from other cultures. DECULTURATION happens when the culture of the older generation comes into conflict with the needs and realities of the younger generation. The reason for the culture has been lost and even the cultural trait itself is in the process of being forgotten. Culture is shared The set of behaviours, attitudes and beliefs that a person possesses is part of a greater collection of values and ideas that is communally owned and practiced by members of a society Culture affects biology Humans are born into cultures that have values on beauty and body. As such, they alter their bodies to fit into the physiological norms that are dictated by culture. Lip plate as worn by a Mursi woman. Wearing lip plate is a sign of beauty. Lotus feet in china. One of the most popular traditions in China is that of foot binding among women that ensures their potential for good marriage. Culture is Adaptive Culture is a tool for survival that humans use in response to the pressures of their environment. INUIT'S of the Arctic TUPIQS (during region are well-known summer) are tents for building igloos made of animal skin, as during fishing and their temporary homes. hunting expeditions. In MUSLIMS, the consumption of pork is not allowed, so cattle is one of their primary source of meat. • The main reason pork is forbidden for Muslims is because it says in the Holy Quran that some food is allowed, while others are explicitly declared haram, which means forbidden. And pork is one of those forbidden foods. However, there is an exception that is written in the Holy Quran as well where it states that you can eat it if you are starving and there is nothing else to eat but pork. This is also in accordance with the Jewish faith, according to their laws and traditions of eating kosher meat. Pork is not dirty but rather regarded as impure, unhealthy and harmful for humans due to the fats, toxins and bacteria it contains and the way the pig spends its life rolling around in mud and its own excrement. The specific aspect that pork is unhealthy has even been proven by scientists, such as Hans- Heinrich Reckeweg, who argued that western populations who eat pork carry more diseases than other populations who do not eat pork. In India, on the other hand, cows are venerated, so consuming beef is considered taboo. According to Marvin Harris, these taboos are responses to the environmental pressures on food supply in these areas. CULTURE IS MALADAPTIVE Culture can also cause problems for the people who subscribe to it. These problems arise when the environment has changed and culture has remained the same. CULTURE CHANGES The final characteristic of culture is that it is never static. This dynamism of culture is due to the changing needs of humans as they interpret and survive in their environment. THEORIES ON CULTURE Comparison of Theories on Culture THEORY PERSPECTIVE ON CULTURE CULTURAL All cultures undergo the same development EVOLUTION stages in the same order. DIFFUSIONISM All societies change as a result of cultural borrowing from one another. HISTORICISM Each culture is unique and must be studied in its own context. PSYCHOLOGICAL Personality is largely seen to be the result ANTHROPOLOGY of learning culture. THEORY PERSPECTIVE ON CULTURE
FUNCTIONALISM Society is thought to be like a
biological organism with all of the parts interconnected. NEO-EVOLUTIONISM Culture is said to be shaped by environmental and technological conditions. MATERIALISM Culture is the product of the “material conditions” in which a given community of people finds itself. ANTHROPOLOGY IN THE 21ST CENTURY
The key strength of anthropology as a
discipline of the social science is its holistic approach to the study of humans. It is holistic in the sense that it studies:
1. Humans both as biological and social creatures
2. Human behaviour from the time the species existed to the time that it will desist 3. Human behaviour from all regions of the world 4. All forms of human actions and beliefs.