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(Ebook) Encyclopedia of Social and Cultural Anthropology 1st Edition by Alan Barnard, Jonathan Spencer ISBN 0203866479 9780203866474

  • SKU: EBN-1477286
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Authors:Alan Barnard, Jonathan Spencer
Pages:886 pages.
Year:2010
Editon:2
Publisher:Routledge
Language:english
File Size:7.58 MB
Format:pdf
ISBNS:9780203866474, 9780415409780, 0203866479, 0415409780
Categories: Ebooks

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(Ebook) Encyclopedia of Social and Cultural Anthropology 1st Edition by Alan Barnard, Jonathan Spencer ISBN 0203866479 9780203866474

(Ebook) Encyclopedia of Social and Cultural Anthropology 1st Edition by Alan Barnard, Jonathan Spencer - Ebook PDF Instant Download/Delivery: 0203866479, 9780203866474
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ISBN 10: 0203866479 
ISBN 13: 9780203866474
Author: Alan Barnard, Jonathan Spencer

Written by leading scholars in the field, this comprehensive and readable resource gives anthropology students a unique guide to the ideas, arguments and history of the discipline. Combining anthropological theory and ethnography, it includes 275 substantial entries, over 300 short biographies of important figures in anthropology, and nearly 600 glossary items. The fully revised and expanded second edition reflects major changes in anthropology in the past decade.

(Ebook) Encyclopedia of Social and Cultural Anthropology 1st Table of contents:

  1. Preface to the second edition
  2. Acknowledgements
  3. First edition
  4. Second edition
  5. Introduction
  6. Coverage and contributors
  7. How to use this book
  8. List of entries
  9. List of contributors
  10. Analytical table of contents
  11. Contributions by author
  12. A
  13. Aboriginal Australia
  14. Spencer and Gillen
  15. Radcliffe-Brown
  16. Lévi-Strauss on kinship
  17. The structural study of symbolism
  18. Marxist and ecological studies
  19. Land claims
  20. Aboriginal empowerment
  21. Further reading
  22. adoption and fostering
  23. Further reading
  24. aesthetics
  25. Further reading
  26. affect
  27. Further reading
  28. Africa: East
  29. Definition and influences
  30. Ethnicity
  31. Religion and magic
  32. Generation
  33. Violence and armed conflict
  34. HIV and AIDS
  35. Further reading
  36. Africa: Nilotic
  37. Age and social order
  38. Land, lineages and prophets
  39. Divinity and experience
  40. Further reading
  41. Africa: Southern
  42. Historical and political background
  43. Bantu-speaking Southern Africa
  44. Khoisan Southern Africa
  45. Other ethnic groups
  46. Further reading
  47. Africa: West
  48. Region: definition and contemporary states
  49. Language
  50. Geography
  51. Ethnic groups
  52. History
  53. Ethnographic writing: colonial traditions
  54. Further reading
  55. age
  56. Age-class polities
  57. Other models
  58. Further reading
  59. AIDS
  60. Further reading
  61. alliance
  62. Further reading
  63. American anthropology
  64. Trends in American anthropology past and present
  65. Continuities in the American tradition
  66. Disciplinary history
  67. Further reading
  68. Americas: Central
  69. Anthropological backwaters
  70. Church and ‘fiestas’
  71. The world outside
  72. Further reading
  73. Americas: Latin America
  74. Anthropological perspectives
  75. Rural society – folk culture
  76. Peasants and relations of power
  77. Contemporary perspectives
  78. Further reading
  79. Americas: Native North America
  80. Morgan and the Iroquois
  81. Twentieth-century studies of social organization
  82. Boas and the Northwest Coast Indians
  83. To the future
  84. Further reading
  85. Americas: Native South America(Highland)
  86. ‘Scientific’ anthropology
  87. The principles and politics of integration
  88. Defining the Andean
  89. History and social change in the late twentieth century
  90. Further reading
  91. Americas: Native South America(Lowland)
  92. Tribes and culture areas
  93. Counterfeit paradise and indigenous realities
  94. Indians and the modern nation-state
  95. Anthropogenecism
  96. Further reading
  97. ancestors
  98. Further reading
  99. anthropological societies
  100. Further information
  101. Further reading
  102. archaeology
  103. Connections to sociocultural anthropology
  104. History of archaeology as a discipline
  105. Archaeology and the politics of the past
  106. Further reading
  107. Arctic
  108. Explorers’ and missionaries’ accounts
  109. The pioneers of Arctic ethnography
  110. Arctic ethnography and the development of anthropology
  111. Arctic peoples in contemporary anthropology
  112. Further reading
  113. art
  114. Further reading
  115. Asia: Central
  116. Further reading
  117. Asia: East
  118. Continuity and difference
  119. An example: Taiwanese and Korean shamans
  120. The challenge of the region
  121. Further reading
  122. Asia: South
  123. Colonial society and ethnography
  124. The ‘village studies’ era and Dumont’s theory of caste
  125. The legacy of Dumont’s theory
  126. Contemporary change and communal politics
  127. Further reading
  128. Asia: Southeast
  129. Techno-economic adaptations
  130. Hill people
  131. Valley people
  132. Coastal people
  133. Colonialism and nationalism
  134. Further reading
  135. avunculate
  136. Further reading
  137. B
  138. belief
  139. Further reading
  140. Big Man
  141. Further reading
  142. biological anthropology
  143. Human evolution
  144. Primatology
  145. Human genetics
  146. Auxology
  147. Human ecology
  148. Further reading
  149. Boas, Franz
  150. Boas as ethnographer
  151. Boas as theorist
  152. Boas as professional
  153. Boas as activist
  154. Further reading
  155. body
  156. Further reading
  157. British anthropology
  158. In the name of science
  159. Explicating human history
  160. The end of synthetic anthropology
  161. Toward membership in a global intellectual community
  162. Further reading
  163. Buddhism
  164. Further reading
  165. C
  166. Canadian anthropology
  167. Further reading
  168. cannibalism
  169. Further reading
  170. capitalism
  171. Further reading
  172. cargo cult
  173. Further reading
  174. Caribbean
  175. Caribbean ontologies
  176. The African diaspora and the cultural politics of ethnology
  177. Postwar developments
  178. The next generation and beyond
  179. Further reading
  180. caste
  181. Further reading
  182. cattle complex
  183. Further reading
  184. children and childhood
  185. The first primitives
  186. Margaret Mead and childhood
  187. Cross-cultural studies of child rearing
  188. Child-centred anthropology
  189. Further reading
  190. Chinese anthropology
  191. Further reading
  192. Christianity
  193. Further reading
  194. citizenship
  195. Further reading
  196. civil society
  197. Further reading
  198. class
  199. Further reading
  200. classical studies
  201. Anthropology and the classics
  202. Continuities or differences
  203. Further reading
  204. classification
  205. Ways of classifying the world
  206. Principles of categorization
  207. Mundane schemes
  208. Symbolic schemes
  209. Conclusion
  210. Further reading
  211. cognatic society
  212. Further reading
  213. cognition
  214. Psychology and anthropology
  215. Concepts
  216. Universals and innate knowledge
  217. Schemas
  218. Analogy and thought
  219. Further reading
  220. colonialism
  221. Anthropology and colonialism
  222. Colonial transformations
  223. The culture of colonizers
  224. Further reading
  225. community
  226. Traditional anthropological approaches
  227. Symbolic approaches
  228. Evolutionary approaches
  229. ‘Community’ in current usage
  230. Further reading
  231. compadrazgo
  232. Further reading
  233. comparative method
  234. Further reading
  235. complementary filiation
  236. Further reading
  237. complex society
  238. Varieties of small-scale units
  239. Regions, nations and globalization
  240. Culture, history and anthropology at home
  241. Further reading
  242. componential analysis
  243. Further reading
  244. conception
  245. Further reading
  246. consumption
  247. Further reading
  248. cosmology
  249. Cosmology and classification
  250. Structuralism and after
  251. Further reading
  252. cosmopolitanism
  253. Further reading
  254. counterinsurgency
  255. Further reading
  256. Crow-Omaha systems
  257. Further reading
  258. cultural materialism
  259. Further reading
  260. cultural studies
  261. Further reading
  262. culture
  263. Prehistory: from Herder to Boas
  264. After Boas
  265. Culture versus society
  266. From meaning to contest
  267. Further reading
  268. culture and personality
  269. Cultural patterns
  270. Basic and modal personality
  271. Untenable assumptions
  272. Cultural schemas
  273. Further reading
  274. D
  275. dance
  276. Meaning
  277. Methods to discover meaning
  278. Further reading
  279. death
  280. Dealing with the dead
  281. After death
  282. The living and the dead
  283. Further reading
  284. descent
  285. Systems of descent
  286. Further reading
  287. development
  288. Development and evolution
  289. Anti-evolutionism and relativism
  290. ‘Practical anthropology’ and postwar modernization
  291. Neo-Marxist critique
  292. ‘Development anthropology’
  293. Further reading
  294. diaspora
  295. Further reading
  296. diffusionism
  297. Coda
  298. Further reading
  299. discourse
  300. Further reading
  301. divination
  302. Further reading
  303. dreams
  304. Further reading
  305. dual organization
  306. Further reading
  307. Dutch anthropology
  308. Further reading
  309. E
  310. ecological anthropology
  311. The recent history of ecological anthropology
  312. Ecological anthropology in theoretical debate
  313. Ecological ethnography: some illustrations
  314. Contributions to the study of global environmental problems
  315. Further reading
  316. economic anthropology
  317. Fieldwork
  318. Theory
  319. Community and market economies
  320. The market ideal
  321. The community ideal
  322. Locality
  323. Resources
  324. Distribution
  325. Uncertainty, rationality and pragmatism
  326. Market in community
  327. Models, markets and communities
  328. Further reading
  329. education
  330. Education as disruption
  331. Practical mastery and formal learning
  332. Acquiring and constructing knowledge
  333. Literacy, apprenticeship and cognition
  334. Education and power
  335. Further reading
  336. emic and etic
  337. Etic and emic in cross-cultural comparison
  338. The emic model is not the native’s model
  339. Critiques of emic and etic
  340. The future of emic and etic
  341. Further reading
  342. emotion
  343. Rival approaches to the analysis of emotion
  344. Cross-cultural explanation and the question of universals
  345. New directions in research
  346. Further reading
  347. engagement
  348. Modes of engagement
  349. Further reading
  350. Enlightenment anthropology
  351. Further reading
  352. environment
  353. Meanings
  354. Biophysical factors
  355. Materialism, idealism, and holism
  356. Symbolism and metaphor
  357. Dualism and anthropocentrism
  358. Applications
  359. Further reading
  360. essentialism
  361. Further reading
  362. ethics, anthropological
  363. Further reading
  364. ethics, anthropology of
  365. Further reading
  366. ethnicity
  367. Primordialist views
  368. Instrumentalist approaches
  369. Constructivist theories
  370. The future of ethnicity research
  371. Further reading
  372. ethnography
  373. Ethnography as product: a history of ethnography
  374. Ethnography as process: doing ethnography
  375. Further reading
  376. ethnopsychiatry
  377. Origins and history
  378. Are mental illnesses universal?
  379. The mechanism of psychological healing
  380. Somatization and the idioms of distress
  381. Clinically applied ethnopsychiatry
  382. Further reading
  383. ethnoscience
  384. Further reading
  385. Europe: Central and Eastern
  386. Definitions and boundaries
  387. Ethnicity and nationalism
  388. Peasantry and underdevelopment
  389. Socialism and the aftermath
  390. Conclusions
  391. Further reading
  392. Europe: Northern
  393. Anthropology, ethnology, folklore and social history
  394. The anthropology of Northern Europe
  395. Further reading
  396. Europe: Southern
  397. Oxford beginnings
  398. The Mediterranean as a culture area
  399. History and process in Southern Europe
  400. Amoral familism
  401. Further reading

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