Social and Cultural anthropology: What defines and justifies the study of the discipline.
Title: Social and Cultural anthropology: What defines and justifies the study of the discipline.
Category: /Social Sciences/Current Issues
Details: Words: 1697 | Pages: 6 (approximately 235 words/page)
Social and Cultural anthropology: What defines and justifies the study of the discipline.
Category: /Social Sciences/Current Issues
Details: Words: 1697 | Pages: 6 (approximately 235 words/page)
Introduction.
For many thousands of years, travel, trade and exploration have brought people of different languages and cultures into contact with each other, generating tales of strange and exotic peoples and their customs. What is a universal human trait, curiosity, evolved through the centuries into intellectual speculation and philosophical theories about "the other" and later still, became the scientific study of mankind. Although the roots of anthropology can be traced to antiquity, it only emerged
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Introduction to Social and Cultural Anthropology. London. Pluto Press
Hammersley, M. & Atkinson, P. (1983) Ethnography: Principles in Practice. Routledge
Keesing, R M & Strathern, A J. (1998 3rd ed) Cultural Anthropology; A contemporary perspective. Harcourt brace
Levi-Strauss, Claude (1983) Le Regard eloigne. Paris. Plon. (English ed: The View from Afar. New York. Basic Books 1985)
WWW.THERAI.ORG.UK <Tab/>The Royal Anthropological Institute UK. Anthropology Today, Vol. 14, No. 5, October 1998
Accessed 22-06005