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Anthropology and other people’s knowledge

Anthropology and other people’s knowledge

Week 13: Anthropology in 100 years

Ryan Schram
ANTH 1002: Anthropology in the world
Wednesday, October 30, 2024

Slides available at https://anthro.rschram.org/1002/2024/13.2

Cultural continuity as a value today

Cultures continue, and they also change. Which fact is more relevant to understand the present, either at an individual level, at the level of a single community of people, or when thinking about people in general and globally?

Should we view cultural continuity as...

Boas and the concept of plural cultures

Franz Boas is responsible for creating a properly cultural anthropology in which difference can be explained with a new idea of culture.

Salvage anthropology

Anthropologists think in terms of cultural relativism based on Boas’s argument that culture is a whole.

While Boas and his students were interested in each culture’s unique path of development, they also sought to document Native American cultures they feared would disappear.

Their ethnographic projects were a “salvage” operation to record a disappearing way of life and way of thinking.

The plural concept of culture meant to emphasize the integrity of each culture, but it often led to an assumption that cultures were units to be counted.

Are people the best experts on themselves?

Each of us has an awareness of and knowledge about ourselves which is our own, and is not the same as how others see us or understand who we are.

In the same way, we can speak of a community of people who have a shared body of knowledge of themselves as a community.

And this internal, communal self-knowledge is not the same how, for instance,

Anthropology has a unique relationship to people’s self-knowledge

Ethnographies of change can involve denying people’s self-knowledge

Anthropology classes in 2025 and beyond

Sem 1, 2025

Sem 2, 2025

In 2026, we plan on offering classes on environmental anthropology, medical anthropology, and health disparities, and potentially new topics as well.

References and further reading

Boas, Franz. (1920) 1940. “The Methods of Ethnology.” In Race, Language, and Culture, 281–89. New York: The Macmillan Company.