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         Cultural Anthropology:     more books (101)
  1. Introducing Cultural Anthropology: A Christian Perspective by Jenell Williams Paris, Brian M. Howell, 2010-12-01
  2. Cultural Anthropology by Stephen A. Grunlan, Marvin K. Mayers, 1988-03-29
  3. Coffee Culture: Local Experiences, Global Connections (Routledge Series for Creative Teaching and Learning in Anthropology) by Catherine M. Tucker, 2010-12-17
  4. Cengage Advantage Books: Humanity: An Introduction to Cultural Anthropology by James Peoples, Garrick Bailey, 2008-03-03
  5. Cultural Anthropology (3rd Edition) by Daniel G. Bates, Elliot M. Fratkin, 2002-07-27
  6. Thinking Like an Anthropologist: A Practical Introduction to Cultural Anthropology by John Omohundro, 2007-01-08
  7. Cultural and Social Change in Taiwan: Society, Cinema and Theatre (Media, Culture and Social Change in Asia Series) by Ming-Yeh Rawnsley, 2011-04-15
  8. The Cultural Politics of Food and Eating
  9. Cultural Anthropology: Tribes, States, and the Global System by John H. Bodley, 2005-01
  10. Thompson Advantage Books: Humanity: An Introduction to Cultural Anthropology (wi by James; Bailey, Garrick Peoples,
  11. Cultures and Globalization: Cultural Expression, Creativity and Innovation (The Cultures and Globalization Series)
  12. Encyclopedia of Social and Cultural Anthropology
  13. Cultural Anthropology (with Themes of the Times for Cultural Anthropology) (7th Edition) by Marvin Harris, Orna Johnson, 2006-05-21
  14. The Anthropology of Development and Globalization: From Classical Political Economy to Contemporary Neoliberalism (Blackwell Anthologies in Social and Cultural Anthropology)

61. Cross-Cultural Anthropology - Anthropology Journals, Books & Online Media | Spri
Crosscultural anthropology - Anthropology Archaeology. Cross-cultural anthropology A Reference Collection is a set of three separate encyclopedias
http://www.springer.com/west/home/social sciences/anthropology & archaeology?SGW

62. Cultural Anthropology At The University Of Florida
Their research interests include the following African American studies, African diaspora, aging, applied anthropology, development,
http://web.anthro.ufl.edu/cultural_program.shtml
Cultural Anthropology at the University of Florida
Cultural anthropologists on the faculty conduct research in Africa, Latin America, North America , and Asia . Their research interests include the following: African American studies, African diaspora, aging, applied anthropology, development, anthropological ecology, economic anthropology, ethnicity, ethnography, feminism, globalization, history of anthropology, human rights, kinship, anthropological linguistics, literacy, medical anthropology, political anthropology, public health, race and racism, research methods, theory, visual anthropology, and women/gender studies.
Department Main Menu
Cultural Anthropology
Cultural Anthropologists Department Resources
Turlington Hall, Room 1112
PO Box 117305 Gainesville, FL 32611

63. Cultural Anthropology
Anthropology is highly interdisciplinary. In addition to cultural anthropology, it also includes archaeology, linguistics, physical anthropology and medical
http://www.library.cornell.edu/olinuris/ref/staff/lynn/workshops/anthro.html
Return to Workshops Home Cultural Anthropology Notes from the workshop: Anthropology is highly interdisciplinary. In addition to cultural anthropology, it also includes archaeology, linguistics, physical anthropology and medical anthropology. See Cultural Anthropology: A Guide to Reference and Information Sources (Reference Z 5111 K46 1991), for a good overview of the subdisciplines. The focus of this workshop is Cultural Anthropology. The workshop will introduce a number of literature guides along with some research tools and strategies. Reference material for Cultural Anthropology can be found in two different call number classifications Z 5100- and GN - . Core Resources in Cultural Anthropology: Cultural Anthropology: A Guide to Reference and Information Sources . (Olin Reference Z 5111 K46 1991) Very helpful, includes all the sub-disciplines of anthropology. Subject index in back. Area studies. Encyclopedia of Cultural Anthropology (Olin Reference GN 307.E52x 1996) Outlines Anthropological thinking about different concepts. One example is the section on Gender. Entries include a selected bibliography.

64. Cultural Anthropology | Graduate Program | Department Of Anthropology
Biological Anthropology Photos Among the topical interests of the cultural anthropology faculty are gender and sexuality, culture and power, modernity and
http://www.colorado.edu/Anthropology/graduate/subdisciplines/cultural.html
Site Title
University of Colorado at Boulder Search CU-Boulder web people Search Center CU A to Z
Cultural Anthropology
Among the topical interests of the cultural anthropology faculty are gender and sexuality, culture and power, modernity and consumption, religion and ritual, matrilineal societies, human ecology, pastoralism, applied anthropology, maritime anthropology, nationalism and ethnic identity, racial constructs, post-colonialism, and history and memory. Areas of regional expertise in the department include Latin America and the Caribbean, Native America, Atlantic Canada and the Arctic, South Asia, Southeast Asia, Tibet, East Africa, Polynesia, and Eastern Europe, as well as their respective diasporas around the world.
Cultural Faculty
Linguistic Anthropology. Department of Linguistics; Human adaptations to arid land and savanna ecosystems, pastoralism, East Africa Religion, caste, kinship, and ethnic conflict in South Asia, South India, and Sri Lanka

65. American University Library - Cultural Anthropology: Latin America
cultural anthropology Latin America updated (7/07). La agonía de Rasu Niti . 1990. 1 videocassette (30 min.). Looks at the life, customs,
http://www.library.american.edu/subject/media/anthro_latin.html
document.write(customDate(new Date)) Cultural Anthropology: Latin America
updated (7/07) . 1990. 1 videocassette (30 min.). Looks at the life, customs, culture and history of the Andean peoples. Discusses the passing of the ceremony of "dansak" from one generation to another as a means of preserving the cultural tradition. Encourages students to practice using Spanish vocabulary to express emotion. VHS 1472 AIDS in the barrio: Eso no me pasa a mi . 1988. 1 videocassette (30 min.). Discusses the causes and effects of AIDS in the Hispanic community through interviews with AIDS sufferers, their families, and members of the community at large. Drug abuse, cultural attitudes toward condom use and toward homosexuality, and the economic causes of drug abuse in the barrio are covered, as well as the role of family and friends in comforting and helping AIDS victims. Measures to prevent the spread of AIDS to wives and women friends of drug users and bi-sexual men are also discussed. VHS 3073 Americas . 1993. 10 videocassettes (570 min.). This intimate look at contemporary Latin America examines issues confronting the entire region by focusing on individual communities. VHS 2121-2130

66. CAM
This is an update on CAM, the cultural anthropology Methods Journal. The editors of CAM are H. Russell Bernard, Stephen Borgatti, Pertti Pelto,
http://lucy.ukc.ac.uk/cam.html
Introduction to CAM
This is an update on CAM, the Cultural Anthropology Methods Journal. The editors of CAM are H. Russell Bernard, Stephen Borgatti, Pertti Pelto, and Oswald Werner. Beginning its eighth year, CAM publishes articles on the real "how to" of qualitative and quantitative research methods articles on how to:
  • manage field notes and other texts using specialized software
  • automate the coding of open-ended interviews
  • draw random samples under field conditions
  • do pile pile sorts by telephone
  • interpret the output of multidimensional scaling programs
  • choose ethnographic informants
  • build dictionaries and genealogies by computer in the field
  • run inexpensive stat programs for analysis in the field
  • use electronic mail
  • do on-line bibliographic searches
  • submit grant proposals
  • write an effective book prospectus
CAM also publishes reviews of software of interest to all field researchers in the social sciences. CAM is read in 12 countries. CAM costs $15.00 USC per year, including postage in the U.S., for three issues. The price is the same for individuals and libraries. In Canada and Mexico, add $3.00 postage. Elsewhere, add $6.00 for surface mail, $9.00 for air mail. Purchase orders accepted. Florida residents, please add 6% (90 cents) sales tax. Back issues: $84, (includes postage in the U.S., Canada, and Mexico) for the full set of 19 issues, 1989-1995. A list of the back issue contents is included here.

67. Guide To The North American Collections/Cultural Anthropology Collections
Other cultural anthropology Collections. The changing lifeways of Native American people are illustrated in some secondary collections.
http://www.peabody.harvard.edu/photo/n_america/cultural.html
PHOTOGRAPHIC RESOURCES
GUIDE TO THE NORTH AMERICAN COLLECTION
CULTURAL ANTHROPOLOGY COLLECTIONS John K. Hillers Inventory No. 10-13
Accession No. 63-2
Date: 1872-1876
Contents: Sepia prints
Photographer: John K. Hillers (1843-1925)
Collector: John Wesley Powell Expedition (1872-1876) for the Bureau of American Ethnology and Geological Survey, Smithsonian Institution Inventory Nos. 10-14 and 10-53
Accession No. 975-63
Contents: Albumen prints Inventory No. 10-59
Accession No. NA
Date: 1870-1900 Photographers: John K. Hillers, Timothy O'Sullivan (1840-1882), George M. Wheeler, and B. F. Childs Contents: Stereographs Related Collections: Photographs: Historic Print Collections: 34-120, 63-02. Artifacts: 74-20, 77-36, 88-51, 95-21, 44-18. Paper Archives: 77-36, 88-51, 95-21, 34-120, 63-02. As photographer for John Wesley Powell's expeditions to the Southwest sponsored by the Bureau of American Ethnology and Geological Survey, John K. Hillers documented field research findings. However, because of his brilliant sense of light, shadow, composition, and balance, his photographs are also recognized for their uncommon aesthetic qualities. The inventoried collections include sepia prints and numerous albumen prints at Canyon de Chelly, the Walpi and Jemez Pueblos, and of various scenes taken between 1872 and 1882 along the route of the Atchison, Topeka and Sante Fe Railroad. A set of stereographs by Hillers and other expedition photographers such as Timothy O'Sullivan contain scenes from everyday life, cliff dwellings, and identified portraits of Navajo, Mohave, Zuni, and Paiute. Some of the prints provide a context for the artifacts collected during the Powell expeditions and housed at the Peabody Museum.

68. Wiley::Anthropology And Child Development: A Cross-Cultural Reader
Social and cultural anthropology. Kinship and Family An Anthropological Reader. by Robert Parkin (Editor), Linda Stone (Editor)
http://www.wiley.com/WileyCDA/WileyTitle/productCd-0631229752.html
United States Change Location

69. Anthropology Bookshelf
The LinguaLinks Anthropology bookshelf also includes the entire contents of cultural anthropology, an introductory anthropology textbook written by Paul G.
http://www.ethnologue.com/LL_docs/anthro_bkshlf.asp

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Anthropology Bookshelf
Designed to help you do cultural research as a basis for language work and translation
The LinguaLinks Anthropology bookshelf focuses on providing essential help to field workers for living and working in cross-cultural situations. Cultural awareness is a theme in every one of the LinguaLinks Library bookshelves because it is so fundamental to the process of working with minority and endangered languages. Anthropology is not intended to be a separate compartment in a field worker's mental filing cabinet or an item on a checklist, but a discipline for thinking, observing, and relating throughout the course of a language project. Language workers who understand the culture of the minority language group they are working with will better be able to serve the group. They will be able quickly to find their appropriate roles in the local community, and to relate to the community in ways that are meaningful to them. If culture learning is done well, it will enhance the outcome of the whole project.

70. Cultural Anthropology — Blogs, Pictures, And More On WordPress
Tony Cliff From Wikipedia “postmodernism tends to refer to a cultural, intellectual, or artistic state lacking a clear central hierarchy or org … more »
http://wordpress.com/tag/cultural-anthropology/
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Preferred Language: English Espa±ol Deutsch Portuguªs do Brasil Fran§ais Italiano Bahasa Indonesia Nederlands Svenska Portuguªs T¼rk§e More Languages
Blogs about Cultural Anthropology
Featured Blog
Postmodern concepts in contemporary life
Humane Systems Design (HSD)
Effects of a Me-Centered Generation?
Phil wrote 1 week ago Tags: SBI
On Human Genetic Variation and Human Identity 7 comments
Kambiz Kamrani wrote 1 week ago : The breakthrough of 2007, as announced by AAAS, the nonprofit organization that publishes Science, is human genetic variation. Human genetic Tags: Blog Physical Anthropology
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wrote 1 week ago : I listen to a podcast by this psych instructor so I decided to check out his blog since he had Tags: Behavior Change Cultural hegemony Learning Learning Skills ... Thinking
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javeja wrote 1 week ago Tags: Delhi University
Only in Austin: P. Terry's Burger Stand
enkerli wrote 3 weeks ago Tags: Austin
On December 25, 1866, Harper's Weekly featured a cartoon about Santa Claus and Christmas...
bedeboop wrote 1 month ago Tags: Beliefs Culture Customs / Practices Family / Kinship ... Tradition / Rituals
Origins of Christmas shrouded in mystery, misconception

71. SocioSite: CULTURAL AND SOCIAL ANTHROPOLOGY
cultural and social anthropological studies and resources. Editor Albert Benschop (University of Amsterdam).
http://www.sociosite.net/topics/anthropo.php
Home Subject Areas Peculiarities Society ... Contact
Social and Cultural Anthropology
General Resources CyberAnthropology Archaeology Associations ... Web History
General Resources
  • A Line in the Sand
  • Aboriginal Studies Electronic Data Archive (ASEDA)
    A catalogue of materials about Australian Indigenous languages held at the Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies (AIATSIS). ASEDA has materials including dictionaries, grammers, teaching materials, and represents about 300 languages. You can find items by map region or language name.
  • Abya Yala Net
    Dedicated to providing information on the Indigenous peoples of Mexico, Central, and South America. It is a project of the South and Meso American Indian Rights Center ( SAIIC ) in collaboration with NativeWeb
  • - Stanford University Libraries, USA
    Includes a great list of links from Africa South of the Sahara . You can find information ordered by countries/regions, browse in a list of many topics, and you can search the Africa pages. Current events can be disclosed by continent or country. And last but not least you will find an up-to-date list of discussion groups, dissertations and African educational programs. The site is prepared by Karen Fung fot the Electronic Technology Group, African Studies Association, USA.
  • African-American Mosaic
    A Resource Guide for the Study of Black History and Culture, presented by the Library of Congress . It covers the nearly 500 years of the black experience in the Western hemisphere, the Mosaic surveys full range size, and variety of the Library's collections, including books, periodicals, prints, photographs, music, film, and recorded sound. The exhibit is a selection of text and graphics from the full publication and covers slavery, abolition, migrations and the beginning of the Works Project Administration in the 1930's.

72. Marcus, George E.: Anthropology As Cultural Critique
Marcus, George E. anthropology as cultural Critique, university press books, shopping cart, new release notification.
http://www.press.uchicago.edu/cgi-bin/hfs.cgi/00/1436.ctl
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Marcus, George E. and Michael M. J. Fischer Anthropology as Cultural Critique An Experimental Moment in the Human Sciences . 2d edition. 228 p. 6 x 9 1996 Paper $16.00 ISBN: 978-0-226-50450-6 (ISBN-10: 0-226-50450-6) Spring 1999
Using cultural anthropology to analyze debates that reverberate throughout the human sciences, George E. Marcus and Michael M. J. Fischer look closely at cultural anthropology's past accomplishments, its current predicaments, its future direction, and the insights it has to offer other fields of study. The result is a provocative work that is important for scholars interested in a critical approach to social science, art, literature, and history, as well as anthropology. This second edition considers new challenges to the field which have arisen since the book's original publication.
TABLE OF CONTENTS Contents
Preface
Introduction
1. A Crisis of Representation in the Human Sciences

73. Maxwell School: Department Of Anthropology
The anthropology Department in the Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs at Syracuse University is oriented primarily toward sociocultural
http://www.maxwell.syr.edu/anthro/
dqmcodebase = "/anthro/template_script/" //script folder location
Social Science Disciplines
Anthropology A nthropology at Syracuse is committed to comparative research on the diversity of human life and advocates a holistic viewpoint that attends to ramifications of human life as seen through the traditional four subfields of anthropology (archaeology, biological anthropology, linguistic anthropology and socio-cultural anthropology). Within sociocultural anthropology, the department has strengths in: issues of cultural and socio-economic change, of language and power, the cultural and political dimensions of religious systems, space and its use by humans, environmental issues, conflict studies, and local-level political economies and their ties with the larger global political economy, particularly through processes of globalization. The field of anthropological praxis is continually evolving, encompassing applied anthropology, activist anthropology, and the study of social movements. We see it primarily as a study of participatory processes, including social movements, that seek to address social inequality, oppression, conflict and violence. At the same time, we recognize that the field incorporates issues of public policy, representation (as in museums or tourism), and preservation. For students whose goal is directed more to anthropology within the public sector, the Master’s in Public Administration through the Executive Education Program is a possibility. Other students may seek additional work in

74. Anthropology At UNT: NSF: Purpose
This is an internal page that provides a template to create new pages within the anthropology web site.
http://www.unt.edu/anthropology/nsf.htm
Purpose Guidelines Frequently Asked Questions NSF Brochure(.pdf) Application ... Anthropology at UNT
Purpose and Description
The UNT Summer Research Program is a national site for one of the National Science Foundation’s “Research Experience for Undergraduate” (REU) programs. It’s a 10 week long opportunity where undergraduates work in close collaboration with faculty mentors and staff to both learn and apply social science research methods, particularly those from a scientifically anthropological point of view. The program starts out with five weeks of intensive instruction in theory, methodology, data collection and interpretation, research skills, critical thinking, and writing. The instruction will be in the form of interactive lectures, discussions, assignments, and readings. Following that is five weeks of focused individual research. Participants will prepare a literature review, design research with the help of a faculty mentor, and prepare a proposal to submit to an Institutional Review Board (IRB). After conducting research, students will produce a research report and make a professional poster presentation. Past participants have had the opportunity to publish in an acclaimed online undergraduate research journal. The UNT REU program is for college students who are between their sophomore and senior years, who are members of groups traditionally under-represented in colleges and universities, including minority students and first-generation college students.

75. Human Civilisation & Modern Culture, Civilizations
It is difficult to generalise on human lifestyles as adaptation to the environment is a continual, cultural and learned process.
http://www.ecotao.com/holism/hu_mod.htm
CIVILISATION: MODERN CULTURES Return to: Human evolution index page.
Introduction:
Humanity has passed through three major evolutionary phases - hunter gatherer agricultural and technological . It is difficult to generalise on human lifestyles as adaptation to the environment is a continual, cultural and learned process. Instead of genetic adaptation, cultural adaptation has been important. Physical changes are small. Forest dwellers tend to be small, with a light muscular frame (Beazley, 1990). Eastern Mediterranean hunter gatherers of 30,000 to 9,000 years ago stood at five feet ten inches. Agriculturalists of 5,000 to 3,000 years ago, from the same region, only average five foot three inches (Kates, 1994). The American average in the industrial society of today is five foot eight inches. Evidence suggests that both the size and robustness of humans, and their brain volume has decreased over the last 10,000 years or so (Sci. Am, early 1995). For a very detailed history of the past 20,000 years refer to Mithen's (2003) 600 page book.
The traditional classification of human social evolution is into pre-history and recordered history. The latter follows the invention of writing and therefore written historical records. Pre-history is broken down onto

76. Blackwell Synergy - Cookie Absent
Your browser may not have a PDF reader available. Google recommends visiting our text version of this document.
http://www.blackwell-synergy.com/doi/pdf/10.1525/can.2007.22.1.94
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