"Storytelling in anthropology" Essays and Research Papers

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    Anthropology notes

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    Why do cultures change? Much change is unforeseen‚ unplanned‚ and undirected Changes in existing values and behaviors may also come about due to contact with other people’s who introduce new ideas or tool This may even involve the massive imposition of foreign ideas and practices through conquest of one group by another. What is modernization? Process of change by which traditional‚ nonindustrial societies acquire characteristics of technological complex society Causes of cultural change

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    In her study Manning (2000) summarized the literature of ritual and identified seven categories of ritual “highlighted due to their prevalence or importance on college campuses” (Manning‚ 2000‚ p. 5). Her studies were based on observations at Mount Holyoke College in South Hadley‚ Massachusetts‚ and Saint Michael’s College in Colchester‚ Vermont‚ both liberal arts colleges similar to Wilkinson College in mission and organization. Manning’s (2000) study developed non-mutually exclusive categories

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    Biological Anthropology Biological Anthropology is the study of human biology within the framework of evolution. There are four subfields of Biological Anthropology; genetics‚ human variation‚ paleoanthropology‚ and primatology. Primatology is the study of non-human primates and I find it the most interesting of the four subfields. The study of Primatology focuses on the biological and psychological aspects of non-human primates. Also it looks at the similarities shared between humans and primates

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    Forensic anthropology complements humans rights work in many ways‚ as summarized in Burns’ article. Burns breaks apart forensic anthropology and human rights work‚ by describing what the fields are fundamentally as well as‚ describing the history of forensic anthropology and the steps a forensic scientist takes. Burns also shows how each discipline promotes each other‚ differ from one another‚ are enacted simultaneously and what they can accomplish. Altogether‚ Burns argues that human rights crimes

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    Social Anthropology Paper

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    was browsing through jobs though that had a high job outlook and stumbled upon Social Anthropology. I had never heard of this career and didn’t really know what it meant. After doing more research and “googling”‚ I realized that this job consisted of all the things I had always been curious about. I never really understood other societies or why people behaved the way they did. I know now that anthropology has so many more components to it than the social aspect of it‚ but that is the main reason

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    Anthropology Exam Review

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    Anthropology Exam Review Anthropology: The scientific study of humans‚ including their origins‚ behaviour and physical‚ cultural and social development. Cultural Anthropology: Explore how culture has shaped people in the past and present day. Physical Anthropology: Explore where human species came from‚ how our bodies developed in the present form‚ and what makes us unique. Psychology: The scientific study of the human mind‚ mental states‚ and human behaviour. Sociology: The scientific study

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    the contemporary world where people and goods constantly (but not freely) move? How such cultures are daily being reproduced‚ commented upon and criticized‚ transformed‚ or newly produced? This course will introduce the field of socio-cultural anthropology through the exploration of some of its central topics‚ methods and theories. We refuse to see “culture” as a bounded “thing” in a particular place or as a fixed and timeless characteristic of a certain group of people. Instead‚ we focus on the

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    Anthropology as a Western Discipline Ambrose Bierce‚ the esteemed American satirist of the early 1900’s‚ defined in his Devil’s Dictionary the word “Aboriginies” as “n. Persons of little worth found cumbering the soil of a newly discovered country. They soon cease to cumber; they fertilize” (1). The overtly “western” view aptly captured by Bierce in his description exemplifies the field of anthropology and the methods it employed for quite some time—starting from the period of Antiquity until

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    main fields of anthropology: biological anthropology‚ cultural anthropology‚ archaeology‚ and linguistics. Anthropologists tend to specialize in one of the four main fields but must be familiar with the other fields because they are all closely related to one another. First‚ biological anthropology deals with the study of humans as living organisms. In other words‚ people on this field might study human growth‚ anatomy‚ human ancestors‚ and genetics. Second is cultural anthropology. This field studies

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    Forensic anthropology is the study of inspecting human remains. Forensic anthropologists often work and help out forensic cases‚ and they often help solve crimes that involve human remains that can’t be identified to just anyone‚ but for these anthropologists‚ they come in hand to help solve these cases. Forensic anthropologists are notably helpful with decomposed bodies that are found due from natural causes such as earthquakes or tsunamis or bodies that were burned‚ or unrecognizable. Forensic

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