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Instructor Supplement

 
Cultural Anthropology 3/e

Daniel G. Bates
Elliot M. Fratkin

Published July 2002 by Allyn & Bacon
Copyright 2003, 512 pp., Paper
ISBN: 0-205-37035-7
List Price:
$70.80

Inventory Status:
In-Stock
   
Summary

The objective of this book remains to introduce cultural anthropology to readers with limited background in the subject. Material is presented in a unified framework rather than as an encyclopedia of anthropological concepts and findings or a series of subtopics. KEY TOPICS: Cultural Anthropology, Third Edition is based on the central theme that individuals are active decision-makers, continually involved in creating and using their culture. Faced with new problems and new situations in their environment, people will often attempt to find solutions that go beyond traditional customs and cultural prescriptions. It also stresses the importance of placing humans in a wider evolutionary context. MARKET: For anyone interested in learning about Cultural Anthropology.

Features

  • Maintains a cultural ecology approach and unifying theme of human ecology, culture, and politics that result in an ideal text for those students concerned about the environment, as it “provides a way to understand current geopolitical problems, culture change, economic globalization, clashes of modernization and tradition, and issues of increasingly constrained circumstances,” according to a reviewer.
  • Includes extensive ethnographic case studies in every chapter.
  • Contains a unique “Adaptive Patterns” section (Part II), with coverage of four major subsistence strategies. Human innovation and adaptability are stressed.
  • Offers at least two boxes in every chapter, which have been highly praised for their timeliness and immediacy. The five categories of boxes include “Contemporary Issues,” “Using Anthropology,” “State of the Peoples,” “Gender Issues,” and “Human Ecology.”
  • Authors integrate coverage of gender, the impact of colonialism, globalization, and cultural diversity throughout the text, providing students with insights into important issues that affect main concepts rather than relegating these issues to a chapter at the end of the book.


Table of Contents

Each chapter concludes with “Summary,” “Key Terms,” and “Suggested Readings.”

I. THE REALM OF ANTHROPOLOGY.

1. The Anthropological Perspective.

The Discipline of Anthropology.

The Anthropologist's Viewpoint.

Objectivity and Science in Anthropology.

Studying Cultural Behavior: Fieldwork, Data Collection, and Analysis.

Interpreting the Data.

2. Anthropological Theory.

Theories in Anthropology.

3. Culture and Language.

What Is Culture?

Behavior, Biology, and Learning.

The Roots of Language.

The Structure of Languages.

Sign Language.

Linguistic Variation and Change.

Sociolinguistics.

4. Decisions, Adaptation, and Evolution.

The Human Evolutionary Legacy.

Human Ecology.

The Evolution of Procurement Systems.

Political Ecology.

Adaptation and Cultural Evolution.

II. ADAPTIVE PATTERNS.

5. Foraging.

The Organization of Energy.

Social Organization.

Settlement Patterns and Mobility.

Resilience, Stability, and Change.

The Dobe Ju/'hoansi.

The Inuit or Eskimo.

The Batak Foragers of the Philippines.

6. Horticulture: Feeding the Household.

The Horticultural Adaptation.

The Yanomamö.

The Pueblo of North America.

7. Nomadic Pastoralism.

The Pastoral Adaptation.

Social Organization.

The Ariaal of Northern Kenya.

The Yörük of Turkey.

Al-Murra of Saudi Arabia.

8. Intensive Agriculture: Feeding the Cities.

The Development of Intensive Agriculture.

The Social Consequences of Intensive Agriculture.

The Tamang of Nepal.

Where the Dove Calls: The Mexican Village of Cucurpe.

The Kofyar of Central Nigeria.

Directions of Change in Rural Egypt.

9. Industrial Society: Feeding the World.

From Intensive Agriculture to Industrialized Farming.

Urbanized Rural Society: Farming in the United States.

The Rise and Fall of Collective Agriculture in Bulgaria

III. CULTURAL DIVERSITY.

10. Kinship, Marriage, and the Household.

Kinship and Social Organization.

Descent Ideology and Descent Groups.

Marriage, Remarriage, and Marital Residence.

Family Households.

11. Identity and Inequality: Gender, Ethnicity, and Nation.

The Social Division of Labor.

Gender.

Race and Ethnicity.

Race and Ethnic Stratification.

Systems of Stratification.

Ethnicity, Nationalism, and Conflict.

12. Economics: Resources, Production, and Exchange.

Concepts of Economic Behavior.

Diversity in the Organization of Economies.

Regulating Access to Resources.

Production.

Mechanisms of Exchange.

Economic Experimentation and Adaptation.

13. Politics, Social Control, and Political Organization.

The Political Process.

The Ecology of Political Behavior.

Evolution of Political Organization.

The Politics of Social Control.

Political Relations Among Societies.

14. Religious Belief and Ritual.

Defining Religion.

Belief Systems.

Ritual.

The Organization of Ritual.

Religion and Resource Management.

Psychological and Sociopolitical Functions of Religion.

15. The Challenges of Globalism.

Beyond Industrialism.

The Social and Ecological Consequences of Postindustrialism.

Can We Survive Progress?

Sahel Visions.

The Ethics of Development Work.

Glossary.

References.

Index.




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