Results for 'Ethnology. Social and cultural anthropology '

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  1. Human rights, culture and context: anthropological perspectives.Richard Wilson (ed.) - 1997 - Sterling, Va.: Pluto Press.
    Drawing on case studies from around the world - including Iran, Guatemala, USA and Mexico - this collection documents how transnational human rights discourses and legal institutions are materialised, imposed, resisted and transformed in a variety of contexts.
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  2.  10
    Bodies and Persons: Comparative Perspectives from Africa and Melanesia.Michael Joshua Lambek, Michael Lambek, Professor of Anthropology Michael Lambek & Andrew Strathern - 1998 - Cambridge University Press.
    This book suggests a bold comparative approach to broad cultural differences between Africa and Melanesia. Its theme is personhood, understood in terms of what anthropologists call embodiment. These concepts are applied to questions ranging from the meanings of spirit possession, to the logics of witchcraft and kinship relations, the use of rituals in healing, and even the impact of capitalism. Questioning common assumptions about the huge differences among these discrete areas, the contributions document surprising continuities.
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  3.  29
    Semiotics of culture and New Polish Ethnology.Marcin Brocki - 2003 - Sign Systems Studies 31 (1):271-277.
    The paper deals with the contemporary state of semiotic ethnology in Poland (connected with New Polish Ethnology group), its internal and external influences, its specifics, subjects and its reaction to the other theoretical propositions. The “neotribe” of New Polish Ethnology was established by few younger scholars, ethnologists in the early 1980s, in an opposition to the dominant stream of positivistic ethnology. Today they have become classics of Polish anthropology, masters that have educated a new generation of their students, and (...)
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  4.  32
    Trends in philosophical anthropology and cultural anthropology in postwar germany.Hermann Wein - 1957 - Philosophy of Science 24 (1):46-56.
    The semantic confusion in Europe about the term “anthropology” has of late been considerable. On the one hand there is meant by it, and quite justifiably, human biology and medical anthropology. On the other hand, the work of some contemporary thinkers, under the name of “philosophical anthropology,” has recently gone beyond the narrower compass. This has been noticeable at both the German and the international European philosophical conventions since the last war. In addition to this, there appeared (...)
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  5.  88
    Culture Crisis: Anthropology and Politics in Aboriginal Australia.Jon C. Altman & Melinda Hickson (eds.) - 2010 - University of New South Wales Press.
    In 2007 th eAustralian government declared that remote Aboriginal communities were in crisis and launched the Northern Territory Intervention.
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  6. Audit cultures: anthropological studies in accountability, ethics, and the academy.Marilyn Strathern (ed.) - 2000 - New York: Routledge.
    If cultures are always in the making, this book catches one kind of culture on the make. Academics will be familiar with audit in the form of research and teaching assessments - they may not be aware how pervasive practices of 'accountability' are or of the diversity of political regimes under which they flourish. Twelve social anthropologists from across Europe and the Commonwealth chart an influential and controversial cultural phenomenon.
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  7.  20
    After Writing Culture: Epistemology and Praxis in Contemporary Anthropology.Andrew Dawson, Jennifer Lorna Hockey & Andrew H. Dawson (eds.) - 1997 - Routledge.
    Anthropologists now openly acknowledge that social anthropology can no longer fulfill its traditional aim of providing holistic, objective representations of people of "exotic" cultures. After Writing Culture asks what theoretical and practical role contemporary anthropology can play in our increasingly unpredictable and complex world. With fourteen articles written by well-known anthropologists, the work explores some of the directions in which contemporary anthropology is moving, following the questions raised by the "writing culture" debates of the 1980s. Some (...)
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  8.  29
    Society and culture in sociological and anthropological tradition.Gavin Walker - 2001 - History of the Human Sciences 14 (3):30-55.
    In this article I consider the uses of the concepts ‘society’ and ‘culture’ in various sociological and anthropological traditions, arguing that sociology needs to learn from the division between social anthropology and cultural anthropology. First I distinguish the social and the cultural sciences: the former use ‘society’ as leading concept and ‘culture’ as a subordinate concept; the latter do the contrary. I discuss the origins of the terms société and Kultur in the classical French (...)
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  9.  8
    Is There Too Much Sociology of Science?The Social Basis of Scientific DiscoveriesAugustine BranniganFrames of Meaning: The Social Construction of Extraordinary ScienceH. M. Collins T. J. PinchThe Manufacture of Knowledge: An Essay on the Constructivist and Contextual Nature of ScienceKarin D. Knorr-CetinaEssays in the Sociology of PerceptionMary DouglasSciences and Cultures: Anthropological and Historical Studies of the SciencesEverett Mendelsohn Yehuda ElkanaPhilosophy of the Social Sciences, June 1981, Volume 11, Number 2. [REVIEW]David Edge - 1983 - Isis 74 (2):250-256.
  10.  64
    Herder: culture, anthropology and the Enlightenment.David Denby - 2005 - History of the Human Sciences 18 (1):55-76.
    The anthropological sensibility has often been seen as growing out of opposition to Enlightenment universalism. Johann Gottfried Herder (1744-1803) is often cited as an ancestor of modern cultural relativism, in which cultures exist in the plural. This article argues that Herder’s anthropology, and anthropology generally, are more closely related to Enlightenment thought than is generally considered. Herder certainly attacks Enlightenment abstraction, the arrogance of its Eurocentric historical teleology, and argues the case for a proto-hermeneutical approach which emphasizes (...)
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  11.  56
    Definitional Argument in Evolutionary Psychology and Cultural Anthropology.John P. Jackson - 2010 - Science in Context 23 (1):121-150.
    ArgumentEvolutionary psychologists argue that because humans are biological creatures, cultural explanationsmustinclude biology. They thus offer to unify the natural and social sciences. Evolutionary psychologists rely on a specific history of cultural anthropology, particularly the work of Alfred Kroeber to make this point. A close examination of the history of cultural anthropology reveals that Kroeber acknowledged that humans were biological and culture had a biological foundation; however, he argued that we should treat culture as autonomous (...)
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  12. Engaging anthropological theory: a social and political history.Mark Moberg - 2019 - New York: Routledge.
    1. Of politics and paradigms -- 2. Claims and critiques of anthropological knowledge -- 3. Anthropology before anthropologists -- 4. Theory and practice to change the world -- 5. Heirs to order and progress -- 6. Spencer, Darwin, and the evolutionary parables for our time -- 7. The Boasian Revolution -- 8. Culture and Psychology -- 9. Functionalism, the pure and the hyphenated -- 10. Anti-structure and the collapse of empire -- 11. Evolution redux -- 12. Contemporary materialist and (...)
     
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  13. Folk biology and the anthropology of science: Cognitive universals and cultural particulars.Scott Atran - 1998 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 21 (4):547-569.
    This essay in the "anthropology of science" is about how cognition constrains culture in producing science. The example is folk biology, whose cultural recurrence issues from the very same domain-specific cognitive universals that provide the historical backbone of systematic biology. Humans everywhere think about plants and animals in highly structured ways. People have similar folk-biological taxonomies composed of essence-based species-like groups and the ranking of species into lower- and higher-order groups. Such taxonomies are not as arbitrary in structure (...)
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  14.  1
    Sakha Tȯru̇ttėrė Uonna Kyrgys U̇ĭėtė: U̇ḣu̇ĭėėnėr.Seḣen Bolo - 2006 - Bichik. Edited by S. Bolo.
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  15.  11
    Circumstantial Deliveries.Rodney Needham & Fellow of All Souls Professor of Social Anthropology Rodney Needham - 1981 - Univ of California Press.
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  16.  46
    Anthropological, social, and moral limitations of a multiplicity of genders.Hilge Landweer & Gertrudetr Postl - 2005 - Hypatia 20 (2):27-47.
    : This work argues from a social-theoretical perspective for the view that every concept of 'gender' remains bound to reproduction. As every culture is interested in its continuity, it distinguishes individuals according to their assumed possible contribution to reproduction and so develops a fundamental dual classification. Subsequent gender categories are necessarily derived from this one. The conceptual and empirical arguments for this thesis are illustrated through an imagined dystopia. There I envision under what conditions a complete dissociation of the (...)
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  17.  10
    Anthropological, Social, and Moral Limitations of a Multiplicity of Genders.Hilge Landweer & Gertrude Postl - 2005 - Hypatia 20 (2):27 - 47.
    This work argues from a social-theoretical perspective for the view that every concept of 'gender' remains bound to reproduction. As every culture is interested in its continuity, it distinguishes individuals according to their assumed possible contribution to reproduction and so develops a fundamental dual classification. Subsequent gender categories are necessarily derived from this one. The conceptual and empirical arguments for this thesis are illustrated through an imagined dystopia. There I envision under what conditions a complete dissociation of the concepts (...)
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  18.  18
    Anthropological, Social, and Moral Limitations of a Multiplicity of Genders.Hilge Landweer & Translated By Gertrude Postl - 2005 - Hypatia 20 (2):27-47.
    This work argues from a social-theoretical perspective for the view that every concept of 'gender' remains bound to reproduction. As every culture is interested in its continuity, it distinguishes individuals according to their assumed possible contribution to reproduction and so develops a fundamental dual classification. Subsequent gender categories are necessarily derived from this one. The conceptual and empirical arguments for this thesis are illustrated through an imagined dystopia. There I envision under what conditions a complete dissociation of the concepts (...)
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  19.  13
    History and Tradition in Melanesian Anthropology.James G. Carrier - 1992 - Representations Books.
    Melanesian societies, like village societies in many parts of the world, are frequently portrayed as existing in a timeless, traditional present. The effects of this view are seen not only in overall popular and academic understandings of these societies but also in more abstract debates within anthropology about the nature of kinship, exchange, or social organization. History and Tradition in Melanesian Anthropology offers an alternative view, from authors who believe that historical evidence can and must inform our (...)
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  20.  8
    Ethnology of religion is a topical sphere of Ukrainian religious studies.Liudmyla O. Fylypovych - 2006 - Ukrainian Religious Studies 40:31-46.
    The ethnology of religion is a relatively young field of religious studies that emerged as a result of an interdisciplinary study of ethnicity and religion. It is she who studies the great variety of aspects of the interaction and combination of these social phenomena, although, as is well known, religion and ethnicity are the object of attention of various branches of science - religious studies, ethnology, anthropology, ethnography, cultural studies, history, etc. Each of them in their context (...)
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  21.  44
    Biological and cultural bases of human inference.Riccardo Viale, Daniel Andler & Lawrence Hirschfeld (eds.) - 2006 - Mahwah, N.J.: Lawerence Erlbaum.
    Biological and Cultural Bases of Human Inference addresses the interface between social science and cognitive science. In this volume, Viale and colleagues explore which human social cognitive powers evolve naturally and which are influenced by culture. Updating the debate between innatism and culturalism regarding human cognitive abilities, this book represents a much-needed articulation of these diverse bases of cognition. Chapters throughout the book provide social science and philosophical reflections, in addition to the perspective of evolutionary theory (...)
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  22.  82
    French modern: norms and forms of the social environment.Paul Rabinow - 1989 - Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
    In this study of space and power and knowledge in France from the 1830s through the 1930s, Rabinow uses the tools of anthropology, philosophy, and cultural criticism to examine how social environment was perceived and described. Ranging from epidemiology to the layout of colonial cities, he shows how modernity was revealed in urban planning, architecture, health and welfare administration, and social legislation.
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  23.  12
    The Problem of Recognition in Modern Philosophy: Social and Anthropological Dimensions.L. A. Sytnichenko & D. V. Usov - 2023 - Anthropological Measurements of Philosophical Research 23:133-145.
    _Purpose._ The purpose of the article lies in studying the main socio-anthropological measurements of the problem of recognition represented primarily by the philosophy of recognition of Alex Honneth, which is actualized by the struggle of the Ukrainian people for their existence and national-cultural recognition. A consistent analysis of the communicative paradigm in contemporary philosophy led to the understanding of its transformation into the reality of the problem of recognition and the identification of the main forms of recognition in it, (...)
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  24.  34
    Anthropology as Science and the Anthropology of Science and of Anthropology or Understanding and Explanation in the Social Sciences, Part II.I. C. Jarvie - 1984 - PSA: Proceedings of the Biennial Meeting of the Philosophy of Science Association 1984:745 - 763.
    Anthropology, the science of human culture, includes in its scope the anthropology of scientific cultures. Anthropological accounts of these scientific cultures -- which also happen to be the cultures to which most anthropologists belong -- are scarcely adequate. All too often science is assimilated to the practices and thought systems of non-scientific cultures; some anthropologists espousing the anti-scientific methods of symbol analysis and relativism. Arguments of M. Douglas, C. Geertz and F. Hanson are used as critical illustrations.
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  25.  6
    Ethical sense and literary significance: deep sociality and the cultural agency of imaginative discourse.Donald R. Wehrs - 2023 - New York, NY: Routledge.
    This study blends together ethical philosophy, neurocognitive-evolutionary studies, and literary theory to explore how imaginative discourse addresses a distinctively human deep sociality, and by doing so helps shape cultural and literary history. Deep sociality, arising from an improbable evolutionary history, both entwines and leaves non-reconciled what is felt to be significant for us and what ethical sense seems to call us to acknowledge as significant, independent of ourselves. Ethical Sense and Literary Significance connects literary and cultural history without (...)
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  26.  4
    Semiotics of Cities, Selves, and Cultures: Explorations in Semiotic Anthropology.Milton B. Singer - 1991
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  27. Creativity and cultural improvisation.Elizabeth Hallam & Tim Ingold (eds.) - 2007 - New York, NY: Berg.
    There is no prepared script for social and cultural life. People work it out as they go along. Creativity and Cultural Improvisation casts fresh, anthropological eyes on the cultural sites of creativity that form part of our social matrix. The book explores the ways creative agency is attributed in the graphic and performing arts and in intellectual property law. It shows how the sources of creativity are embedded in social, political and religious institutions, examines (...)
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  28. Cultural Anthropology in Schutzian Perspective.Lester Embree - unknown - Phainomena 74.
    Alfred Schutz’s scattered remarks about cultural anthropology can be related to the rubrics of disciplinary definition, basic concepts, and distinctive methods and also to his notion of the theoretical level in social science by consulting current textbooks. This shows a way in which a theory of this particular science can be developed that would fit into a general Schutzian Wissenschaftslehre of the cultural sciences.
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  29.  8
    Domesticating Human Rights: A Reappraisal of their Cultural-Political Critiques and their Imperialistic Use.Fidèle Ingiyimbere - 2017 - Cham: Imprint: Springer.
    This book develops a philosophical conception of human rights that responds satisfactorily to the challenges raised by cultural and political critics of human rights, who contend that the contemporary human rights movement is promoting an imperialist ideology, and that the humanitarian intervention for protecting human rights is a neo-colonialism. These claims affect the normativity and effectiveness of human rights; that is why they have to be taken seriously. At the same time, the same philosophical account dismisses the imperialist crusaders (...)
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  30.  33
    Autism and the Social World: An Anthropological Perspective.Olga Solomon, Karen Gainer Sirota, Tamar Kremer-Sadlik & Elinor Ochs - 2004 - Discourse Studies 6 (2):147-183.
    This article offers an anthropological perspective on autism, a condition at once neurological and social, which complements existing psychological accounts of the disorder, expanding the scope of inquiry from the interpersonal domain, in which autism has been predominantly examined, to the socio-cultural one. Persons with autism need to be viewed not only as individuals in relation to other individuals, but as members of social groups and communities who act, displaying both social competencies and difficulties, in relation (...)
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  31.  8
    Humanism and science in cultural anthropology: The great protein Fiasco.Paul Diener - 1984 - Journal of Social Philosophy 15 (1):13-20.
  32.  42
    Exotics at home: anthropologies, others, American modernity.Micaela Di Leonardo - 1998 - Chicago, Ill.: University of Chicago Press.
    In this pathbreaking study, Micaela di Leonardo reveals the face of power within the mask of cultural difference. From the 1893 World's Fair to Body Shop advertisements, di Leonardo focuses on the intimate and shifting relations between popular portrayals of exotic Others and the practice of anthropology. In so doing, she casts new light on gender, race, and the public sphere in America's past and present. "An impressive work of scholarship that is mordantly witty, passionately argued, and takes (...)
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  33.  57
    Decolonial and Ontological Challenges in Social and Anthropological Theory.Jairo I. Fúnez-Flores - 2022 - Theory, Culture and Society 39 (6):21-41.
    In this article, I examine the conceptual and methodological points of convergence and divergence of two intellectual currents frequently referred to as the decolonial and ontological turns in social and anthropological theory. Salient points considered are the ways both theoretical projects unsettle modernity’s dominant ontological and epistemological foundations by seriously engaging the conceptual potential of thinking with alterity (ethical dimension) and from exteriority (geopolitical dimension). I compare their subversive methodological contributions, examining, in particular, Enrique Dussel’s analectical hermeneutic approach and (...)
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  34.  47
    Culture and Morality: The Relativity of Values in Anthropology.Elvin Hatch - 1983 - Columbia University Press.
  35.  41
    The Social Medicine Reader, Second Edition: Volume One: Patients, Doctors, and Illness, Nancy M.P. King, Ronald P. Strauss, Larry R. Churchill, Sue E. Estroff, and Gail E. Henderson, eds. Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2005. 294 pp. ISBN 978‐0822335689, $24.95. and The Social Medicine Reader, Second Edition: Volume Two: Social and Cultural Contributions to Health, Difference, and Inequality, Gail E. Henderson, Larry R. Churchill, Nancy M.P. King, Jonathan Oberlander, and Ronald P. Strauss, eds. Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2005. 323 pp. ISBN 978‐0822335931, $24.95. [REVIEW]Anita Chary - 2013 - Anthropology of Consciousness 24 (1):76-81.
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  36.  12
    Towards a Historical Cultural Anthropology.Christoph Wulf - 2018 - Dialogue and Universalism 28 (4):109-123.
    In today’s globalized world anthropology is a transdisciplinary and trans-cultural field of research. In the here-proposed concept it encompasses five paradigms: 1) hominization/evolution, 2) philosophical anthropology, 3) historical anthropology/mentality research, 4) cultural anthropology, 5) historical cultural anthropology. Anthropology contributes to the understanding of the human being at the beginning of the 21st century. Anthropology is characterized by a double historicity and culturality; it encompasses a great variety of research questions, methods (...)
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  37.  16
    Ethos and Eidos as Field Level Concepts for the Sociology of Morality and the Anthropology of Ethics: Towards a Social Theory of Applied Ethics.Nathan Emmerich - 2021 - Human Studies 44 (3):373-395.
    This article presents the notions of ethos and eidos as field level concepts for the sociology of morality and the anthropology of ethics. This is accomplished in the context of Bourdieuan social theory and, therefore, from the broad standpoint of practice theory. In the first instance these terms are used to refer to the normative structures of social fields and are conceived so as to represent the way in which such structures fall between two planes, that of (...)
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  38. Method in cultural anthropology.John Hast Weakland - 1951 - Philosophy of Science 18 (1):55-69.
    Those—other social scientists as well as laymen—who have read recent studies of national character and culture by anthropologists, while not having had experience in this field themselves, often seem to believe that the results which such anthropological investigators obtain are interesting, but that the methods used were intuitional, magical, or just invisible. The status of the work is cast in doubt, as falling short of an ideal that scientific description and analysis must be reproducible by any observer to whom (...)
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  39.  14
    Socioeconomic Complexity, Socialization, and Political Differentiation: A Cross‐Cultural Study.Marc Howard Ross - 1981 - Ethos: Journal of the Society for Psychological Anthropology 9 (3):217-247.
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  40.  11
    Ethics and anthropology: facing future issues in human biology, globalism, and cultural property.Anne-Marie E. Cantwell, Eva Friedlander & Madeleine Lorch Tramm (eds.) - 2000 - New York: New York Academy of Sciences.
    Since the 1970s, anthropologists have moved into diverse workplaces, including private and public settings, that raise new issues for anthropology as a discipline as well as for the discourse on science more generally. In the context of increasing globalization, the articulation of new ethical dilemmas around such issues as technology, indigenous knowledge and rights, government regulation and bioethics among others, can and do inform and shape scientific public policy. The authors in this volume work in traditional research centres and (...)
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  41. Culture and Communication. The Logic by Which Symbols Are Connected. An Introduction to the Use of Structuralist Analysis in Social Anthropology.Edmund Leach - 1977 - Philosophy and Rhetoric 10 (3):205-207.
  42.  6
    Towards a philosophical anthropology of culture: naturalism, relativism, and skepticism.Kevin M. Cahill - 2021 - London: Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group.
    This book explores the question of what it means to be a human being through sustained and original analyses of three important philosophical topics: relativism, skepticism, and naturalism in the social sciences. Kevin Cahill's approach involves an original employment of historical and ethnographic material that is both conceptual and empirical in order to address relevant philosophical issues. Specifically, while Cahill avoids interpretative debates, he develops an approach to philosophical critique based on Cora Diamond's and James Conant's work on the (...)
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  43. Values as integrating forces in personality, society and culture: essay of a new anthropology.S. Takdir Alisjahbana - 1966 - London,: Oxford University Press.
     
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  44.  5
    How lifeworlds work: emotionality, sociality, and the ambiguity of being.Michael Jackson - 2017 - London: University of Chicago Press.
    Michael Jackson has spent much of his career elaborating his rich conception of lifeworlds, mining his ethnographic and personal experience for insights into how our subjective and social lives are mutually constituted. In How Lifeworlds Work, Jackson draws on years of ethnographic fieldwork in West Africa to highlight the dynamic quality of human relationships and reinvigorate the study of kinship and ritual. How, he asks, do we manage the perpetual process of accommodation between social norms and personal emotions, (...)
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  45.  26
    Marxism and social anthropology — a proletkul't bibliography on the 'history of culture' (1923).John Biggart - 1982 - Studies in East European Thought 24 (1):1-9.
  46.  25
    Marxism and social anthropology? A Proletkul't bibliography on the?history of culture?John Biggart - 1982 - Studies in Soviet Thought 24 (1):1-9.
  47.  15
    The perception of corruption as social and institutional pressure: A comparative analysis of cultural biases.Davide Torsello - 2013 - Human Affairs 23 (2):160-173.
    This study is an empirical approach to answering the question: are there any universal factors that account for the origin, diffusion and persistence of corruption in human societies? The paper enquires whether the perception of corruption in politics and economics can be tackled as a form of cultural adaptation, driven by exogenous and endogenous forces. These are respectively: freedom of access and management of economic resources, and the pressures towards human grouping. Following the analytical insights of cultural theory, (...)
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  48. Cultural Kinds: Imposition and Discovery in Anthropology in The Qualitative-Quantitative Distinction in the Social Sciences.R. Feleppa - 1989 - Boston Studies in the Philosophy of Science 112:119-153.
  49.  15
    Part 2 Beyond Cultural Wholes?Beyond Cultural Wholes - 2010 - In Ton Otto & Nils Bubandt (eds.), Experiments in holism: theory and practice in contemporary anthropology. Malden, MA: Wiley-Blackwell.
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  50.  19
    The Anthropology of Argument: Cultural Foundations of Rhetoric and Reason.Christopher W. Tindale - 2020 - Routledge.
    This innovative text reinvigorates argumentation studies by exploring the experience of argument across cultures, introducing an anthropological perspective into the domains of rhetoric, communication, and philosophy. The Anthropology of Argument fills an important gap in contemporary argumentation theory by shifting the focus away from the purely propositional element of arguments and onto how they emerge from the experiences of peoples with diverse backgrounds, demonstrating how argumentation can be understood as a means of expression and a gathering place of ideas (...)
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