The Essence of Anthropology
, by Haviland, William A.; Prins, Harald E. L.; Walrath, Dana; McBride, Bunny- ISBN: 9781111833442 | 1111833443
- Cover: Paperback
- Copyright: 1/9/2012
Preface | p. xv |
The Essence of Anthropology | p. 2 |
The Anthropological Perspective | p. 3 |
Anthropology and Its Fields | p. 5 |
Cultural Anthropology | p. 5 |
Linguistic Anthropology | p. 8 |
Archaeology | p. 10 |
Physical Anthropology | p. 11 |
Anthropology, Science, and the Humanities | p. 15 |
Fieldwork | p. 16 |
Field Methods | p. 20 |
Archaeological and Paleoanthropological Methods | p. 20 |
Ethnographic Methods | p. 22 |
Anthropology's Comparative Method | p. 24 |
Questions of Ethics | p. 25 |
Anthropology and Globalization | p. 26 |
Chapter Checklist | p. 28 |
Questions for Reflection | p. 29 |
Key Terms | p. 29 |
Online Study Resources | p. 29 |
Biocultural Connection: Picturing Pesticides | p. 6 |
Anthropology Applied: Forensic Anthropology: Voices for the Dead, by Clyde C. Snow. Karen Burns, Amy Zelson Mundorff, and Michael Blakey | p. 14 |
Original Study: Whispers from the Ice, by Sherry Simpson | p. 18 |
Biology and Evolution | p. 30 |
Evolution and Creation Stories | p. 31 |
The Classification of Living Things | p. 32 |
The Discovery of Evolution | p. 34 |
Heredity | p. 35 |
The Transmission of Genes | p. 35 |
Genes and Alleles | p. 36 |
Cell Division | p. 38 |
Polygenetic Inheritance | p. 40 |
Evolution, Individuals, and Populations | p. 42 |
Mutation | p. 42 |
Genetic Drift | p. 42 |
Gene Flow | p. 44 |
Natural Selection | p. 44 |
The Case of Sickle-Cell Anemia | p. 44 |
Adaptation and Physical Variation | p. 46 |
Macroevolution and the Process of Speciation | p. 47 |
Chapter Checklist | p. 48 |
Questions for Reflection | p. 50 |
Key Terms | p. 50 |
Online Study Resources | p. 51 |
Biocultural Connection: The Social Impact of Genetics on Reproduction | p. 39 |
Original Study: Ninety-Eight Percent Alike: What Our Similarity to Apes Tells Us about Our Understanding of Genetics, by Jonathan Marks | p. 41 |
Living Primates | p. 52 |
Methods and Ethics in Primatology | p. 54 |
Primates as Mammals | p. 55 |
Primate Characteristics | p. 56 |
Primate Teeth | p. 56 |
Sensory Organs | p. 56 |
The Primate Brain | p. 58 |
The Primate Skeleton | p. 59 |
Living Primates | p. 60 |
Lemurs and Lorises | p. 60 |
Tarsiers | p. 60 |
Anthropoids: Monkeys and Apes | p. 62 |
Small and Great Apes | p. 62 |
Primate Behavior | p. 63 |
Chimpanzee and Bonobo Behavior | p. 64 |
Concealed Ovulation | p. 68 |
Reproduction and Care of Young | p. 68 |
Communication | p. 69 |
Use of Objects as Tools | p. 70 |
The Question of Culture | p. 70 |
Primate Behavior and Human Evolution | p. 70 |
Primate Conservation | p. 71 |
Chapter Checklist | p. 72 |
Questions for Reflection | p. 73 |
Key Terms | p. 73 |
Online Study Resources | p. 73 |
Biocultural Connection: Why Red Is Such a Potent Color, by Meredith F. Small | p. 58 |
Original Study: Reconciliation and Its Cultural Modification in Primates, by Frans B. M. de Waal | p. 65 |
Human Evolution | p. 74 |
Mammalian Primate Evolution | p. 76 |
Human Evolution | p. 78 |
The First Bipeds | p. 78 |
Ardipithecus ramidus | p. 78 |
The Anatomy of Bipedalism | p. 79 |
Australopithecines | p. 81 |
Homo habilis | p. 82 |
Interpreting the Fossil Record | p. 83 |
Tools, Food, and Brain Expansion | p. 83 |
Homo erectus | p. 85 |
Lumpers or Splitters | p. 88 |
The Neandertals | p. 88 |
The Upper Paleolithic | p. 91 |
The Modern Human Origins Debate | p. 93 |
Chapter Checklist | p. 95 |
Questions for Reflection | p. 96 |
Key Terms | p. 97 |
Online Study Resources | p. 97 |
Biocultural Connection: Evolution and Human Birth | p. 84 |
Anthropology Applied: Stone Tools for Modern Surgeons | p. 87 |
The Neolithic Revolution | p. 98 |
The Mesolithic Roots of Farming and Pastoralism | p. 99 |
The Neolithic Revolution | p. 100 |
What Is Domestication? | p. 101 |
Evidence of Early Plant Domestication | p. 102 |
Evidence of Early Animal Domestication | p. 102 |
Why Humans Became Food Producers | p. 103 |
The Fertile Crescent | p. 103 |
Other Centers of Domestication | p. 105 |
Food Production and Population Size | p. 110 |
The Spread of Food Production | p. 111 |
The Culture of Neolithic Settlements | p. 112 |
Jericho: An Early Farming Community | p. 112 |
Neolithic Material Culture | p. 112 |
Social Structure | p. 113 |
Neolithic Cultures in the Americas | p. 114 |
The Neolithic and Human Biology | p. 114 |
The Neolithic and the Idea of Progress | p. 116 |
Chapter Checklist | p. 117 |
Questions for Reflection | p. 119 |
Key Terms | p. 119 |
Online Study Resources | p. 119 |
Original Study: The Real Dirt on Rainforest Fertility, by Charles C. Mann | p. 108 |
Biocultural Connection: Paleolithic Prescriptions for the Neolithic and Beyond | p. 115 |
The Emergence of Cities and States | p. 120 |
Defining Civilization | p. 122 |
Tikal: A Case Study | p. 124 |
Surveying and Excavating the Site | p. 125 |
Evidence from the Excavation | p. 126 |
Cities and Cultural Change | p. 127 |
Agricultural Innovation | p. 127 |
Diversification of Labor | p. 127 |
Central Government | p. 128 |
Social Stratification | p. 131 |
The Making of States | p. 132 |
Ecological Theories | p. 132 |
Action Theory | p. 134 |
Civilization and Its Discontents | p. 135 |
Social Stratification and Disease | p. 135 |
Colonialism and Disease | p. 135 |
Anthropology and Cities of the Future | p. 136 |
Chapter Checklist | p. 138 |
Questions for Reflection | p. 138 |
Key Terms | p. 139 |
Online Study Resources | p. 139 |
Anthropology Applied: Tell It to the Marines: Teaching Troops about Cultural Heritage, by Jane C. Waldbaum | p. 133 |
Biocultural Connection: Perilous Pigs: The Introduction of Swine-Borne Disease to the Americas, by Charles C. Mann | p. 136 |
Modern Human Diversity-Race and Racism | p. 140 |
The History of Human Classification | p. 142 |
Race as a Biological Concept | p. 144 |
The Conflation of the Biological into the Cultural Category of Race | p. 144 |
The Social Significance of Race: Racism | p. 146 |
Race and Behavior | p. 146 |
Race and Intelligence | p. 146 |
Studying Human Biological Diversity | p. 149 |
Skin Color: A Case Study in Adaptation | p. 150 |
Culture and Biological Diversity | p. 150 |
Chapter Checklist | p. 155 |
Questions for Reflection | p. 156 |
Key Terms | p. 156 |
Online Study Resources | p. 156 |
Original Study: A Feckless Quest for the Basketball Gene, by Jonathan Marks | p. 147 |
Biocultural Connection: Beans, Enzymes, and Adaptation to Malaria | p. 153 |
The Characteristics of Culture | p. 158 |
Culture and Adaptation | p. 159 |
The Concept of Culture | p. 161 |
Characteristics of Culture | p. 162 |
Culture Is Learned | p. 162 |
Culture Is Shared | p. 164 |
Culture Is Based on Symbols | p. 166 |
Culture Is Integrated | p. 167 |
Culture Is Dynamic | p. 170 |
Culture and Change | p. 170 |
Culture, Society, and the Individual | p. 171 |
Ethnocentrism and the Evaluation of Culture | p. 172 |
Chapter Checklist | p. 174 |
Questions for Reflection | p. 175 |
Key Terms | p. 175 |
Online Study Resources | p. 175 |
Biocultural Connection: Pig Lovers and Pig Haters, by Marvin Harris | p. 160 |
Anthropology Applied: New Houses for Apache Indians, by George S. Esber | p. 168 |
Language and Communication | p. 176 |
Linguistic Research and the Nature of Language | p. 178 |
Descriptive Linguistics | p. 179 |
Phonology | p. 179 |
Morphology, Syntax, and Grammar | p. 179 |
Historical Linguistics | p. 180 |
Processes of Linguistic Divergence | p. 180 |
Language Loss and Revival | p. 181 |
Language in Its Social and Cultural Settings | p. 183 |
Sociolinguistics | p. 183 |
Ethnolinguistics | p. 186 |
Language Versatility | p. 187 |
Beyond Words: The Gesture-Call System | p. 138 |
Nonverbal Communication | p. 188 |
Paralanguage | p. 189 |
Tonal Languages | p. 190 |
Telecommunication: Talking Drums and Whistled Speech | p. 190 |
The Origins of Language | p. 191 |
From Speech to Writing | p. 191 |
Literacy and Modern Telecommunication in Our Globalizing World | p. 193 |
Chapter Checklist | p. 194 |
Questions for Reflection | p. 195 |
Key Terms | p. 195 |
Online Study Resources | p. 195 |
Anthropology Applied: When Bambi Spoke Arapaho: Preserving Indigenous Languages, by S. Neyooxet Greymorning | p. 184 |
Biocultural Connection: The Biology of Human Speech | p. 192 |
Social Identity, Personality, and Gender | p. 196 |
Enculturation: The Self and Social Identity | p. 197 |
Self-Awareness | p. 198 |
Social Identity Through Personal Naming | p. 199 |
Self and the Behavioral Environment | p. 200 |
Culture and Personality | p. 201 |
Personality Development: A Cross-Cultural Perspective on Gender | p. 201 |
Group Personality | p. 205 |
Modal Personality | p. 206 |
National Character | p. 206 |
Core Values | p. 207 |
Alternative Gender Models | p. 208 |
Normal and Abnormal Personality in Social Context | p. 211 |
Sadhus: Holy Men in Hindu Cultures | p. 212 |
Mental Disorders Across Time and Cultures | p. 212 |
Personal Identity and Mental Health in Globalizing Society | p. 216 |
Chapter Checklist | p. 216 |
Questions for Reflection | p. 111 |
Key Terms | p. 218 |
Online Study Resources | p. 218 |
Original Study: The Blessed Curse, by R. K. Williamson | p. 208 |
Biocultural Connection: Down Syndrome Across Cultures, by Katherine A. Detrwyler | p. 214 |
Subsistence and Exchange | p. 220 |
Adaptation | p. 221 |
The Unit of Adaptation | p. 223 |
Adaptation in Cultural Evolution | p. 223 |
Modes of Subsistence | p. 224 |
Food-Foraging Societies | p. 224 |
Characteristics of Food-Foraging Societies | p. 224 |
Food-Producing Societies | p. 225 |
Producing Food in Gardens: Horticulture | p. 225 |
Producing Food on Farms: Agriculture | p. 226 |
Mixed Farming: Crop Growing and Animal Breeding | p. 226 |
Herding Grazing Animals: Pastoralism | p. 227 |
Inten Agriculture: Urbanization and Peasantry | p. 227 |
Industrial Food Production | p. 228 |
Subsistence and Economics | p. 229 |
Land and Water Resources | p. 229 |
Technology Resources | p. 230 |
Labor Resources and Patterns | p. 231 |
Distribution and Exchange | p. 233 |
Reciprocity | p. 233 |
Redistribution | p. 236 |
Market Exchange and the Marketplace | p. 237 |
Local Economies and Global Capitalism | p. 238 |
Informal Economy and the Escape from State Bureaucracy | p. 239 |
Chapter Checklist | p. 241 |
Questions for Reflection | p. 243 |
Key Terms | p. 243 |
Online Study Resources | p. 243 |
Biocultural Connection: Surviving in the Andes: Aymara Adaptation to High Altitude | p. 222 |
Anthropology Applied: Anthropologist S. Ann Dunham: Mother to a U.S. President, by Nancy I. Cooper | p. 240 |
Sex, Marriage, and Family | p. 244 |
Control of Sexual Relations, | p. 246 |
Marriage and the Regulation of Sexual Relations | p. 246 |
Incest Taboo | p. 247 |
Endogamy and Exogamy | p. 249 |
Distinction Between Marriage and Mating | p. 249 |
Forms of Marriage | p. 249 |
Monogamy | p. 249 |
Polygamy | p. 250 |
Group Marriage | p. 253 |
Choice of Spouse | p. 253 |
Cousin Marriage | p. 255 |
Same-Sex Marriage | p. 256 |
Marriage and Economic Exchange | p. 257 |
Divorce | p. 258 |
Family and Household | p. 259 |
Forms of the Family | p. 260 |
Nontraditional Families and Nonfamily Households | p. 261 |
Residence Patterns | p. 262 |
Marriage, Family, and Household in Our Globalized and Technologized World | p. 263 |
Adoption and New Reproductive Technologies | p. 263 |
Migrant Workforces | p. 264 |
Chapter Checklist | p. 265 |
Questions for Reflection | p. 266 |
Key Terms | p. 266 |
Online Study Resources | p. 267 |
Biocultural Connection: Marriage Prohibitions in the United States, by Martin Ottenheimer | p. 250 |
Original Study: Arranging Marriage in India, by Serena Nanda | p. 254 |
Kinship and Other Forms of Grouping | p. 268 |
Descent Groups | p. 269 |
Unilineal Descent | p. 271 |
Other Forms of Descent | p. 273 |
Descent Within the Larger Cultural System | p. 274 |
Lineage Exogamy | p. 274 |
From Lineage to Clan | p. 274 |
Phratries and Moieties | p. 275 |
Bilateral Kinship and the Kindred | p. 276 |
Kinship Terminology and Kinship Groups | p. 277 |
The Eskimo System | p. 277 |
The Hawaiian System | p. 278 |
The Iroquois System | p. 278 |
Kinship Terms and New Reproductive Technologies | p. 278 |
Grouping Beyond Kinship | p. 279 |
Grouping by Gender | p. 279 |
Grouping by Age | p. 279 |
Grouping by Common Interest | p. 280 |
Grouping by Social Status in Stratified Societies | p. 282 |
Chapter Checklist | p. 287 |
Questions for Reflection | p. 289 |
Key Terms | p. 289 |
Online Study Resources | p. 289 |
Biocultural Connection: Maori Origins: Ancestral Genes and Mythical Canoes | p. 270 |
Original Study: African Burial Ground Project, by Michael Blakey | p. 284 |
Politics, Power, and Violence | p. 290 |
Systems of Political Organization | p. 291 |
Uncentralized Political Systems | p. 291 |
Centralized Political Systems | p. 295 |
Political Systems and the Question of Legitimacy | p. 297 |
Politics and Religion | p. 298 |
Political Leadership and Gender | p. 298 |
Political Organization and the Maintenance of Order | p. 300 |
Internalized Controls | p. 300 |
Externalized Controls | p. 300 |
Social Control Through Law | p. 301 |
Functions of Law | p. 301 |
Punishing Crimes and Settling Disputes | p. 302 |
Restorative Justice and Conflict Resolution | p. 302 |
Violent Conflict and Warfare | p. 303 |
Why War? | p. 304 |
Wars Today | p. 306 |
Domination and Repression | p. 307 |
Acculturation | p. 307 |
Ethnocide | p. 308 |
Genocide | p. 308 |
Resistance to Domination and Repression | p. 309 |
Violent Resistance: Rebellion and Revolution | p. 309 |
Nonviolent Resistance: Revitalization Movements | p. 311 |
Chapter Checklist | p. 311 |
Questions for Reflection | p. 313 |
Key Terms | p. 313 |
Online Study Resources | p. 313 |
Anthropology Applied: William Ury: Dispute Resolution and the Anthropologist | p. 303 |
Biocultural Connection: Gender, Sex, and Human Violence | p. 305 |
Spirituality and Religion | p. 314 |
The Role of Spirituality and Religion | p. 315 |
The Anthropological Approach to Religion | p. 317 |
Myth | p. 318 |
Supernatural Beings and Spiritual Forces | p. 319 |
Gods and Goddesses | p. 319 |
Ancestral Spirits | p. 320 |
Other Types of Supernatural Beings and Spiritual Forces | p. 321 |
Sacred Places | p. 322 |
Religious Specialists | p. 323 |
Priests and Priestesses | p. 323 |
Shamans | p. 323 |
Sacred Performances: Rituals and Ceremonies | p. 327 |
Rites of Passage | p. 327 |
Rites of Intensification | p. 329 |
Magic | p. 329 |
Witchcraft | p. 330 |
Ibibio Witchcraft | p. 330 |
Functions of Witchcraft | p. 331 |
Consequences of Witchcraft | p. 332 |
Religion in Cultural Change: Revitalization Movements | p. 332 |
Persistence of Spirituality and Religion | p. 333 |
Chapter Checklist | p. 334 |
Questions for Reflection | p. 335 |
Key Terms | p. 335 |
Online Study Resources | p. 335 |
Biocultural Connection; Change Your Karma and Change Your Sex? by Hillary Crane | p. 324 |
Original Study: Healing among the Ju/'hoansi of the Kalahari, by Marjorie Shostak | p. 326 |
Global Changes and the Role of Anthropology | p. 336 |
Modernization in the Age of Globalization | p. 337 |
A Global Culture? | p. 338 |
Doubts about a Global Cultural Unification | p. 340 |
Pluralistic Societies and Multiculturalism | p. 341 |
Pluralistic Societies and Ethnocentrism | p. 341 |
Structural Power in the Age of Globalization | p. 342 |
Military Hard Power | p. 343 |
Economic Hard Power | p. 344 |
Soft Power: A Global Media Environment | p. 345 |
Problems of Structural Violence | p. 346 |
Overpopulation and Poverty | p. 347 |
Hunger and Obesity | p. 347 |
Pollution and Global Warming | p. 349 |
Reactions to Globalization | p. 352 |
Ethnic Minorities and Indigenous Peoples: Struggles for Human Rights | p. 353 |
Global Migrations: Refugees, Migrants, and Diasporic Communities | p. 353 |
Concluding Remarks | p. 355 |
Chapter Checklist | p. 358 |
Questions for Reflection | p. 359 |
Key Terms | p. 359 |
Online Study Resources | p. 359 |
Biocultural Connection: Toxic Breast Milk Threatens Arctic Culture | p. 350 |
Anthropology Applied: Paul Farmer: Anthropology and Local Health Care Worldwide | p. 356 |
Glossary | p. 361 |
Bibliography | p. 369 |
Index | p. 387 |
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