WeRead Powered by ReaderPub
Anthropology cover

Anthropology

Open in WeRead

Explore more books like this:

About This Book

The lecture outlines the aims and methods of anthropological research, defining the field as the study of anatomical, physiological, and psychological variation among human groups and the historical processes that produced them. It argues anthropology must integrate biological, psychological, geographical, and social evidence to explain influences such as climate, nutrition, migration, isolation, population density, and cultural contacts. It emphasizes reconstructing the early history of nonliterate and prehistoric peoples, clarifies the discipline's limits amid overlap with biology, psychology, history, and philology, and calls for interdisciplinary training and methods to trace the genesis of human types and social forms.

About the Author

Boas, Franz portrait

Franz Boas

Franz Boas was a pioneering anthropologist often referred to as the 'father of American anthropology.' He played a crucial role in establishing anthropology as a distinct academic discipline in the United States. Boas is known for his emphasis on cultural relativism and his critique of racial determinism, advocating for the understanding of cultures on their own terms. His influential works include "Anthropology," which laid the groundwork for modern anthropological thought, and "The Mind of Primitive Man," where he explored the psychological aspects of culture. His extensive research among Indigenous peoples, particularly in the Arctic, contributed significantly to the field's development and understanding of cultural diversity.

More Books by This Author

You May Also Like