Full Description
Synthesizing British, French and American traditions, this stimulating and accessible text presents a comprehensive and fascinating introduction to social and cultural anthropology. It offers an original approach through integrating knowledge produced from a variety of perspectives, placing cultural and social anthropology in a wider context including macro-sociological concepts and reference to biological evolution. Written in a clear and concise style, it conveys to the student the complexities of a discipline focusing on the structure, evolution and cultural identity of human societies up to the present day.
 The text consists of four major parts: the scope and method of anthropology, a conceptual and institutional overview, the evolution of the structure of human societies, and the cultural politics of race, ethnicity, nationalism and multiculturalism.
Contents
Introduction
 Aims
 Bibliography
 MODULE 1
 The scope and method of anthropology
 Introduction
 Aims
 1. Definitions
 2. The sub-disciplines of anthropology
 3. The concept of culture
 4. Ethnography
 5. The uses of history in anthropology
 6. Sociology and social/cultural anthropology
 7. The historical and comparative method
 8. Fads and foibles of anthropology
 Summary
 Essay questions
 Test questions
 Bibliography
 Answers to test questions
 MODULE 2
 Conceptual and institutional overview
 Introduction
 Aims
 1. Economics
 2. Kinship
 3. Person, self and individual
 4. Religion
 Summary
 Essay questions
 Test questions
 Bibliography
 Answers to test questions
 MODULE 3
 The evolution and structure of human societies
 Introduction
 Aims
 1. Darwin's theory of evolution
 2. The human legacy: adapted mind or adaptable mind?
 3. The study of humanity: assumptions, theories and typologies
 4. Hunting and gathering, horticultural and pastoral societies
 5. Agrarian societies
 6. Industrial societies: the making of the mpdern world
 Summary
 Essay questions
 Test questions
 Bibliography
 Answers to test questions
 MODULE 4
 The politics of cultural identity: nationalism, ethnicity, race and multiculturalism
 Introduction
 Aims
 1. Definitions
 2. Nations and nationalism
 3. Ethnicity
 4. Race
 5. The politics of multiculturalism
 Summary
 Essay questions
 Test questions
 Bibliography
 Answers to test questions
 EPILOGUE
 Anthropology and the contemporary world
 1. The anthropology of Europe
 2. The process of cultural globalisation
 3. Looking at the future: a clash of civilisations?
 Bibliography
 Index

              

