| Anthropological Niche of Douglas W. Hume |
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Due to recent updates to this web site, much more information is available and much of the prior information has been moved. If you need help, you can use the Site Map, or use the search tool above, and if that doesn't work, contact me.
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Welcome to my Anthropological Niche!
I also maintain a repository for information on the Darkness in El Dorado controversy. Before NKU, I taught at the University of Connecticut, Southern Connecticut State University and Quinebaug Valley Community College. Enjoy your visit and if you have questions, comments, or input that you would like to share with me, please contact me. What is Anthropology? by Douglas W. Hume (1993, links added in 2007) adapted from David Givens's What is Anthropology? There are many misconceptions about anthropology. Often anthropologists are thought of as traveling to exotic places to study aboriginal people or as archaeologists studying the fossil record.
We learn to avoid "ethnocentrism," the tendency to judge customs inferior on the basis of preconceptions derived from our own cultural backgrounds. This same process allows us to look at our own society with new eyes.
Social or cultural anthropology studies human behavior by means of firsthand observation and interviews within particular communities and interpretation of that behavior by comparison with the results of similar studies in other communities. These communities may be either in a far away exotic land or somewhere closer to home, for example the workplace. They may focus on particular aspects of life or institutions, such as kinship, religion, art, or economics or they may try to characterize a way of life as a whole.
Linguistic anthropology studies the historical development of human languages and the ways in which that development can be used to unravel the relationships between different societies. In addition, linguistic anthropologists are concerned with the nature of language itself and the relationships between language, thought, and behavior; that is, the ways in which language and all the other aspects of human culture interrelate.
In recent years, many archaeologists have moved into the growing field of cultural resource management to help federal, state, and local governments preserve our nation's prehistoric and historic cultural heritage.
For more information about anthropology and what anthropologist do, visit the American Anthropological Association. |
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