Fulltext results:
- 10.2
- ltural determinism and the environment ===== * Culture determines how people adapt * Two cultures adap... . cows, reindeer, sheep, camels, yaks. ==== Horticulture ==== The cultivation of several different food c... e hand tools. ==== And one more… ==== ===== Agriculture ===== Agriculture is often distinguished from horticulture by the size and scale of production, thanks to
- 13.2
- ch difference can be explained with a new idea of culture. * Each culture is its own total picture of the world, a //Weltanschauung//, which is distinct from all... hat different societies have different degrees of culture (a level of achievement on a scale), Boas argues,... cultural relativism based on Boas’s argument that culture is a whole. While Boas and his students were int
- 7.1
- ther light, the fantasy of 19th century bourgeois culture. * Everyone is a Robinson Crusoe on an island ... tion is a group of people that * have the same culture * have the same language * have the same trad... ity, nationality, and anthropology’s argument for culture as an acquired worldview ===== Franz Boas, an im... d against the assumption that race, language, and culture are always linked. * For Boas, culture is acqu
- 9.2
- been given of a direct relation between race and culture. […] Hereditary characteristics when //socially//... he opportunity to impress itself upon the general culture” (Boas [1930] 1940, 265, original emphases). ===... ssociation of physical differences with language, culture, place, etc. with specific racial groups * **ra... rth**, from the moment of entry into language and culture, **dependent on that which is different from me*
- 13.1
- ch difference can be explained with a new idea of culture. * Each culture is its own total picture of the world, a //Weltanschauung//, which is distinct from all... hat different societies have different degrees of culture (a level of achievement on a scale), Boas argues,... cultural relativism based on Boas’s argument that culture is a whole. While Boas and his students were int
- 12.2
- ations were the first steps toward industrial agriculture, and needed a lot of empty land and slave labor t... own household cultivation (much like peasant agriculture). * In some plantations, slaves produced enou... subsistence. * You can’t have plantation agriculture without spaces for people to engage in horticulture. Moreover horticulture is not a distinct technology; i
- 2024
- Carsten (1995) |\\ | Aug 19 | 1. [[4.1|Kinship is culture, not nature]] | | |\\ | Aug 21 | 2. [[4.2|Kinship... cal Restoration: Integrating Science, Nature, and Culture//, edited by Dave Egan, Evan E. Hjerpe, and Jesse... e of the State.” In //Race, Gender, and Political Culture in the Trump Era//. Routledge. Mankekar, Purnim... 21025.2022.2091243. Palmer, Christian T. 2020. “Culture and Sustainability: Environmental Anthropology in
- 4.1
- ~~DECKJS~~ ====== Kinship is culture, not nature ====== ===== Kinship is culture, not nature ===== ==== Week 4: Family matters ==== Ryan Sch... rticles/central-and-south-asia. ===== Nature and culture ===== DNA-based ancestry reports want users to b... gine what your own family looks like from another culture’s perspective: What’s it like to live in a multip
- 4.2
- r and his colleagues were mostly products of this culture, and applied its assumptions to other societies t... r ideas. * Symbolic thinking is not a choice. A culture teaches people to apply symbols to reality, and e
- 10.1
- cal Restoration: Integrating Science, Nature, and Culture//, edited by Dave Egan, Evan E. Hjerpe, and Jesse... 8-1-61091-039-2_18. Palmer, Christian T. 2020. “Culture and Sustainability: Environmental Anthropology in... tion. https://pressbooks.pub/perspectives/chapter/culture-and-sustainability-environmental-anthropology-in-
- module_iv_essay
- Environment in Anthropology: A Reader in Ecology, Culture, and Sustainable Living//, edited by Nora Haenn, ... on Harnish, 2nd ed., 254–73. A Reader in Ecology, Culture, and Sustainable Living. New York: NYU Press. htt
- 1.2
- ers of capital, property, and wealth) imposes its culture of individualism on everyone else. * //Robinso... ll have to live as if this fiction from bourgeois culture is true (Marx [1843b] 1978, 222). ===== Anthropo
- 9.1
- rth**, from the moment of entry into language and culture, **dependent on that which is different from me*
- 7.2
- e of the State.” In //Race, Gender, and Political Culture in the Trump Era//. London: Routledge. Nyamnjoh
- 2.2
- paradox in our concept of society ==== Bourgeois culture teaches us that we are each individual economic a