slmMA Anthroplogy
slmMA Anthroplogy
slmMA Anthroplogy
Structure
1.0. Objectives
1.1. Introduction
1.2. Definitions of Anthropology
1.3. Scope of Anthropology
1.4. Branches of Anthropology
1.4.1. Socio Cultural Anthropology
1.4.2. Biological (Or Physical) Anthropology
1.4.3. Archaeological Anthropology
1.4.4. Linguistic Anthropology
1.4.5. Applied Anthropology
1.5. Social Cultural Anthropology: Nature, Scope And Fields
1.6. Meaning of Socio-Cultural Anthropology
1.7. Nature And Scope of Socio Cultural Anthropology
1.8. Fields of Social Cultural Anthropology
1.8.1. Economic Anthropology
1.8.2. Political Anthropology
1.8.3. Psychological Anthropology
1.8.4. Anthropology Of Religion
1.8.5. Ecological Anthropology
1.9. Let Us Sum Up
1.10. Check Your Progress
1.11. Key Words
1.12. Suggested Readings
1
1.0. OBJECTIVES:
After reading this Chapter, you will be able to:
• Define anthropology and describe its basic concerns and subject
matter;
• Describe the different sub-fields of anthropology;
• Explain how and why socio cultural anthropology as a science
emerged;
1.1. INTRODUCTION:
Anthropology is the study of humans, past and present. To understand the full
sweep and complexity of cultures across all of human history, anthropology draws
and builds upon knowledge from the social and biological sciences as well as the
humanities and physical sciences. A central concern of anthropologists is the
application of knowledge to the solution of human problems. Historically,
anthropologists in the United States have been trained in one of four areas: socio
cultural anthropology, biological/physical anthropology, archaeology, and linguistics.
Anthropologists often integrate the perspectives of several of these areas into their
research, teaching, and professional lives.
The term anthropology is a combination of two words derived from Greek
language: anthropos and logos. The term anthropos is equivalent to the word
mankind or human being, while logos means study or science. So putting the two
words together, anthropology is the study or science of mankind or humanity. The
following are two important, simple, definitions of anthropology.
Anthropology is a broad scientific discipline dedicated to the comparative
study of humans as a group, from its first appearance on earth to its present stage of
development.
Anthropology as subject of study or branch of knowledge has assumed the
present form after passing through various stages of the development. It deals with the
development of man and his origin the creation and evolution. Every society and
religion has its own views about it. But there is no branch of knowledge that studies it
in a scientific manner.
2
Like every other creature, man is also an animal. To explain human variations
Anthropology combines the study of both human biology as well as part of human
behavior which is beyond biology.
Since man is a social animal, he has two dimensions; one deals with the socio-
cultural aspect whereas the other is concerned with the biological aspect. Thus
anthropology as a whole is specifically divided into two main branches, which is
discussed in detail in section
3
The 20th C. witnessed a revolution in giving a definite scientific meaning to
the word anthropology. A.L.Kroeber defined anthropology as ‗the science of groups
of men and their behavior and production‘. M.J.Herskovits defines, ―Anthropology
may be defined as the measurement of human beings, it is the study of man and his
works‘. Clyde Kluckholn , in his book ‗the mirror of man‘ defines, ―anthropology is
the science of man in toto‖.
Topinard defines Anthropology as: ‗it is a branch of natural history and deals
with man and races of mankind‘. As such, Clackhon has defined Anthropology in the
following words: ―Out of all the sciences which studies various aspects of man,
Anthropology is one which comes nearest to break the total of man‖.
Lexicologists, in 2nd half of the 20th C. define anthropology as ―study of
mankind especially of its societies and customs; study of structure and evolution of
man as an animal‖. This is the same definition in Concise Oxford Dictionary.
Anthropologists like Jacobs and Stern defines, ―anthropology is the scientific study of
the physical, social and cultural development and behavior of human beings since
their appearance on this earth‖.
During 1960s and 70s there were many woman liberation movements, which
replaced the word man in the general definitions of anthropology to humankind.
So from all these aspects, the definition given by Jacobs and Stern seems to be
more convincing, comprehensive and best.
The scientific definition of anthropology involves one more factor, time and
space aspect. Hence ―anthropology is the study of human behavior aspects
irrespective of time and space‖.
4
continuum. This sense of continuum may be particularly in terms of time scale. Thus,
the farther we go in time backwards, the narrower becomes the difference between
humanity and non humanity. It has now become a generally accepted fact in
anthropology, although no full evidences are forthcoming, that humanity is a product
of the evolutionary processes, and that humans have evolved from their closest living
primates (Bryan, 1997; Behe,1996).
Such and many other related questions are the concerns of anthropology.
Anthropologists try to know and explain about the technological, economic, political
and intellectual development of humanity. They attempt to discover the
extent to which different human populations vary in their biological and social
characteristics and to understand why these differences exist. Anthropologists are, for
example, interested to know and explain why a pregnant woman in Gumuz goes to a
bush to give birth during labour, how the Nuer practice birth control methods and why
they put horizontal line marks on their forehead, or why the Wolayta put a circular
body mark on their cheek while the Tigreans put a cross mark on their foreheads, etc.
5
similarities in certain beliefs, practices and institutions that are found across cultures.
They grapple with explaining why cultural universals exist. Are these cultural
similarities results of diffusion (i.e., a certain material culture or non-material
culture created in a certain society diffuses to other societies through contact, war,
trade, etc)? Or are they due to independent creation (i.e., certain cultural items created
by two or more societies without one copying from the other)? Anthropologists have
debated taking different sides while attempting to answer these questions.
6
everyday life and with basic philosophical problems of knowledge, truth,
power, and justice. Topics of concern to socio cultural anthropologists include
such areas as health, work, ecology and environment, education, agriculture
and development, and social change.
The life of people has several dimensions, and the attempts to study
each one in detail has resulted in the origin and growth of several sub branches
from the elementary branch of Socio cultural Anthropology, such as Economic
Anthropology, Political Anthropology, Psychological Anthropology,
Anthropology of Religion, and so on and forth.
7
product of its own particular history and that within every society there are
commonalities as well as variation.
8
According to Eliot D. Chapple, ―Applied Anthropology is regarded as
that aspect of anthropology which deals with the description of changes in
human relations and in isolation of the principles that control them and
includes an examination of those terms and factors which restrict the
possibility of change in human organization‖.
9
Anthropologists are still not invited to pass judgment on the merits of
the projects in which their cooperation is sought, but these are in practice
congenial to most of them in a way that moral-improvement policies often
were not. They are not asked, nor do they now seek, to advice on the total
process of social change; their role is now to indicate where existing social
structures and idea systems may present obstacles to specific projects.
INTRODUCTION:
This is also often called social anthropology or cultural anthropology. It is
concerned with the social and cultural dimensions of the living peoples and with the
description and analysis of people‘s lives and traditions Socio-cultural anthropology
studies the social, symbolic or nonmaterial and material lives of contemporary and
historically recent human societies, taking the concept of culture central to its goal
(Howard and Dunaif-Hattis, 1992).
10
There are many other specialized fields of study in social or cultural
anthropology. Some of these include: anthropology of art, medical anthropology,
urban/rural/economic anthropology, political anthropology, development
anthropology, anthropology of religion, legal anthropology, demographic
anthropology, ecological anthropology, psychological anthropology,
ethnomusicology, etc.
11
Thus we may conclude that whereas cultural anthropology is beyond
biological anthropology and is learned as a member of the society; social
anthropology is the comparative study of social phenomenon of men as it occurs in all
the societies.
12
Social-Cultural Anthropology is concerned with particular, generalized and
universal features of culture and society .It studies human species at all levels of
social-cultural development ,tribes, peasants, urban groups and all other peoples
living in different environments. In short , its subject matter is as infinite and as
fascinating as the social-cultural life of humanity itself. Therefore the scope of social-
cultural is universal.
13
e) To promote anthropological knowledge, practice in the field of
industrial and urban problems.
We shall here examine the focus of major fields of socio cultural anthropology
The degree to which something is `necessary' for life has long been
debated and differences between one society and another have environmental,
historical, and cultural reasons; but some wants must be inescapably satisfied,
otherwise death ensues. Therefore, there is a physical limit to relativism
regarding material means of livelihood. On the other hand, nonmaterial goods
such as the goodwill of deceased ancestors might be conceived as essential for
the reproduction of a society. Most nonmaterial needs, however, have some
material expression, such as food sacrifices during ancestor worship or wealth
exchange during mortuary ceremonies. The domain of economic anthropology
covers the recurring interaction of individuals, within and between social
groups and with the wider environment, with the object of providing material
goods and services necessary for social reproduction.
14
Traditionally, economic processes have been divided into production,
distribution and circulation, and consumption. These analytical categories
respond to observable social interaction in all societies, although the
categories themselves are a product of scholarly Western tradition. People,
however, engage in social relations that can be described as `economic' and
which can be analyzed as participating simultaneously in the production,
distribution, and consumption categories. Economic anthropology originally
focused on the Economic Life of Primitive Peoples (Herskovits 1960) where
many of the elements present in the Western economy (such as money, a
market system) were absent. Direct observation of non capitalist societies
through ethnographic fieldwork produced impressive and contextually rich
information on economic activities worldwide. The way in which
anthropologists reacted to the confrontation of this diversity and how they
coped with it in theoretical terms, generated most debates within economic
anthropology.
15
1.8.3. PSYCHOLOGICAL ANTHROPOLOGY:
Psychological anthropology is the study of psychological topics using
anthropological concepts and methods. Among the areas of interest are
personal identity, selfhood, subjectivity, memory, consciousness, emotion,
motivation, cognition, madness, and mental health. Considered thus, there is
hardly a topic in the anthropological mainstream that does not offer grist for
the analytical mill. Like economic or political anthropology, psychological
anthropology can be seen as a perspective on the social as well as being a
subfield of the broader discipline. The overlap in subject matter with the
related discipline of psychology is obvious, but the approach, grounded in
ethnographic fieldwork and comparativism, is usually quite different.
Moreover, as a reflexive endeavour, psychological anthropology shines a light
not only on the cultural vehicles of thought (language, symbolism, the body)
but on the concepts we use to think about those means. Psychological
anthropologists are concerned, for example, not merely with emotional
practices in diverse cultures (what angers people? how do they express it?),
but in the shape and cross-cultural validity of the concept of emotion. To the
ethnographic question, ―How do the Nuaulu classify animals?‖ they add,
―How is their classification structured and what does that structure reveal
about broader processes of cognition?‖ Some of the basic categories of
psychology—self, mind, emotion—turn out, in cross-cultural perspective, to
be less self-evident, less transparently objective than expected. While rough
equivalents can often be found in other linguistic traditions, the scholar soon
finds that English (or French or Malay) is not a neutral inventory of
psychological universals. Comparison can be corrosive of confidence. And
perhaps more than in other subfields, in psychological anthropology there is a
full spectrum from the hard scientific to the soft interpretive. Indeed, a
divergence between a scientific, positivist psychology—confident in its
categories and methods, bent on universals—and a relativist, meaning-
oriented, often doubt-ridden constructionism is one of the productive tensions
that animate enquiry. Until recently, the subfield has fared very differently on
either side of the Atlantic. With some exceptions, anthropologists in Britain
16
and France until at least the 1960s pursued strongly sociological or
structuralist agendas unsympathetic to psychological anthropology.
17
environment on human societies and how it is used by different societies. The
roots of ecological anthropology are found in several different traditions of
environmental explain.
18
3. Bring out the distinctive nature of anthropology as a discipline.
4. Differentiate between socio-cultural anthropology and Physical anthropology?
5. What is the nature of application of anthropology in the contemporary society?
6. Give a brief description of the various branches of anthropology?
7. Explain the application of applied anthropology
8. Explain the development of anthropology
9. Define social-cultural anthropology
10. Discuss the nature, scope and fields of social-cultural anthropology
19
4. Dr. Ramanath Sharma (1998) ― Social Cultural anthropology‖ Surjeet
Publication, kamalanagara, Delhi.
5. Dr. Ramanath Sharma and Rajendra K Sharma (1983) ―Social
Anthropology and Indian Tribes‖ Media Promoters &Publishers Pvt. Ltd
Bombay
6. Herskovits, Melville J, (1965 ) ‗Economic Anthropology: The Economic
Life of Primitive Peoples‘ New York: W.W. Norton & Company, Inc.
7. Howard, Michael C and Janet D.H.1992. Anthropology. Understanding
Human Adaptation. New York: Harper Collins
8. K. Singh ―Social and cultural Anthropology‖ Prakashana Kendra,
Lucknow.
9. Lewellen, Ted (1983). Political Anthropology: An Introduction. Boston,
MA: Bergin and Garvey. pp. 2–4.
10. Majumdar D N and Madan T N (1994) ―An introduction to social
anthropology‖ mayor paperbacks ,NOIDA
11. Scupin, Raymond and Christopher R. DeCorse.1995. Anthropology, a
Global Perspective. Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey: Prentice-Hall.
12. Sing.K. ‗Social and Cultural Anthropology‘, Prakasjana Kendra, Lucknow
13. Wilk, Richard R. (2002) ‗When Good Theories Go Bad: Theory in
Economic Anthropology and Consumer Research‘. In Theory in Economic
Anthropology. J. Ensminger, ed. Pp. 239-250, Vol. 18.
14. Zerihun Doda, M.A.(2005) introduction to sociocultural anthropology,
Ethiopia Ministry of Health, and the Ethiopia Ministry of Education.
20