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Summary Core themes in Anthropology - Full time test - Lectures, books and articles

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This is a summary of all lectures, articles and the book of Thomas Eriksen and of David Kloos

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  • 26 novembre 2023
  • 42
  • 2023/2024
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Introduction
Anthropology is about differences and commonalities.
 Inversed anthropology: research in urban societies and look at integration into
society.

Culture: Different aspects of behaviors which members of societies have acquired (after they
were born).
E.g.: abilities, notions (what do you think of society), forms of behavior, objects.
 Refers to the acquired, cognitive, and symbolic aspects of existence.
 It is learned, shared human behavior and ideas, which can and do change with time.
 Not bounded or integrated.

The relationship between culture and society:
 Culture refers to the acquired aspects of existence.
 Society refers to the social organization of human life, patterns, and relationships.

Holism: looking at connections and interactions between all different factors.

Theocratical paradigms
Ways of researching
Ethnocentrism: Evaluating a culture while still taking your preconceptions / own background
as a leading factor.
 Describing them in your own terms.

Cultural relativism: Comparing societies without relating them to scales. Having in mind that
they are unique.
 Understanding societies in an unprejudiced way.

Epistemology: The theory of knowledge, especially regarding its methods, validity and scope.
 Reflecting on used methods; which are valid / best / worse / objective / reliable?
 Finding out how people know what exists.

Ontology: Seeking explanation and classification about entities (with emic terms), that are
dealt with the nature of being.
 Sometimes you are theorizing about something in a culture that in the culture its selves
are not relevant or even a factor, thus why should you do it?
 Also, non-human actors (spiritual world).
 Asking what exists and trying to understand it.

Induction dimension: watching, wondering, done through field work.
Deductive dimension: hypothesizing and creating theories.

Theory: Ideas intended to explain something between two different factors, in a different
way than already is given/known.

Levels:

, 1. Concept
2. Processes; a higher level, more explanatory level.
3. Grand theories; enormous explanatory ideas (e.g., evolutionism).

History: a product of the past which is currently redesigned by present thoughts.
 New theories arise due to the present.
 Key variable for historical change; Social cohesion: the strength of relationships and the
sense of solidarity among members of a community.

Theoretical Paradigms: approach to anthropology. Consisting of assumptions about the
nature of society, a theoretical core, key figures, a sense of belonging.
 Starts from a theoretical core idea.
 Replies to specific concerns/questions from our history / era.
 They emerge in a particular era and to earlier ideas.

Paradigms:
 Evolutionism: reflects on globalization/imperialism
 Historical particularism (Boaz): all societies or cultures have their own unique history.
- Franz Boas emphasized that we need to look at every society as an individual case.
 Structural-functionalism (Radcliffe): main social and cultural principles are functional to
overall social structure. Emphasizing on social institutions (kinship, norms).
 Structuralism (Mauss): the mind has a common structure expressed though myth,
kinship, and other cultural phenomena.
 Transactionalism (Barth): the logic of human action is the same everywhere.
 Culture and personality school
 Symbolic or interpretative anthropology
 Genderstudies
 Postmodernism
 Globalisation theory: to account for the ways in which modern mas communications,
migration, capitalism interact with local conditions. And understanding cultural diffusion.
Theoretical questions
 Universalism vs relativism: what is common to humanity vs what is culturally specific.
 Ethnocentrism vs cultural relativism: moral judgements vs neutral descriptions of people.
 Humanity vs the animal kingdom: culture vs nature

Main scholars
1. Franz Boas: promoted historical particularism and cultural relativism.
2. Bronislaw Malinowski: you need to engage in full cultural context to understand
interconnections.
 Inventor of fieldwork: he wrote a paper while staying under the radar in New Guinea.
3. Alfred Radcliffe-Brown: believed in structural functionalism: empathize on social
institutions.
 Social and cultural phenomena are functional and contribute to the maintence of overall
social structure.
4. Marcel Mauss: believed in systematic comparison of patterns in social life. Looked for
structural similarities.

,Fieldwork
Ethnography: the way anthropologist are doing fieldwork.
 You are viewed as natural by the residents.

Importance
 Observing routines that are difficult to describe.
 Hearing the use of terms/concepts in context.
 Seeing social organization in action.
 Building trust to prepare for interviews.
 Seeing discrepancies between what people say and do.

Forms to take while researching
1. The clown; you discover how they react to your behavior, you know how they think.
2. The expert; they give you too much respect: you do not get to know them properly.

Problems
1. Feeling helpless
2. Adjustment to their natural (hostility, climate, different hygiene).
 E.g., being pitied when being alone
3. Limited knowledge of language:
 Solution can be describing or analyzing them in comparative terms.
4. Gender bias
5. Time intensive
6. Demanding
7. Professional bias / positionality
8. Getting a random sample

Positionality: the background of yourself has an enormous impact on the kind of research
that you do.
 Reflect on your gender, age, race and your class.

Criteria of good research
Objectivity: however, this is impossible due to your background.
Large numbers: however, too time consuming.
Rapport: You limit the distance between the interlocular and yourself.
 have you established a good relation / adjust to the local society?
Reflexivity: reflecting on obstacles, rapport etc.
Ethnographic depth: detailed and thick description.

Ethical dilemmas
 Informed consent
 Should you get personally involved?
 Developing aggressive behavior towards the hosts.
 Obtain mixed feelings towards the interlocuters.
 Inequality of power
 Local conflicts

, Crisis in 1980s
 Quality of important books were questioned.
 Opening of black box of fieldwork; they talk about what went wrong.
 Male bias.
 The right to represent others.
 Role in counter insurgency.
 Is objective knowledge possible?


Classifications
Our human character is not inborn; it is nurture; acquired through learning.

Four dimensions of human existence




 Darwin’s theory to look at the similarities and variations within any group.

Genetic universals: Inborn traits
 Incapable of explaining the cultural variation.
E.g., Average length, body weight, ability to acquire language.

Genetic differences: Distinction between differences “races”
 Racial variations (skin colors) are just a small difference between population groups.
 Race is not about physical appearance but about behavior.
 Incapable of explaining cultural variation.

Cultural universals: what makes us human?
 Language as communication, the use of different tools, hierarchies.

Cultural variation: Distinctiveness

Every cultural projects (building villages/roads) seem to imply a transformation of external
nature.

Cultural specifics
 Sociality: living in social groups.
 Culturalization: transmission of culture.
 Ethnocentrism; looking at other opinions.

Nature:

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