that anthropology can be defined as: the study of human beings. Yet many other humanities, sciences and social sciences could also be defined as the study of human beings since the definition itself is so broad.
WHAT THEN IS UNIQUE OR
CHARACTERISTIC OF ANTHROPOLOGY?
(a). anthropology is transcultural;
looks all human groups, large and small; distant and near.
(b). anthropology spans all of human
history, the ancient and the modern. We must know past to understand present.
(c). anthropology is holistic;
seeks to demonstrate how aspects of cultures are linked, how they affect one another; seeks to understand all aspects of human behavior. It is a multifaceted approach to the study of human behavior.
Anthropology seeks to find the
generalities about human life while also explaining the differences. To do this the examples must include a transcultural and historical perspective.
Anthropology seeks to understand
and explain why people do the things they do and say the things they say. A goal is create better understanding among people.
In sum, we as anthropologists often
say that anthropology is the most humane of the sciences and the most scientific of the humanities. Thus we draw data from all kinds of sources.
WHAT ARE the SUBFIELDS of
ANTHROPOLOGY as a SOCIAL SCIENCE?
THE TWO MAIN SUB-FIELD DIVISIONS
WITHIN ANTHROPOLOGY ARE:
(1) biological anthropology
(2) cultural anthropology. In this course we will be focusing on cultural anthropology.
Biological anthropology seeks to
understand human behavior from a biological base especially focusing upon human evolutionary history and biological variation among human populations.
Some examples of biological
anthropology are paleontology; primatology; the study of human variation
Cultural anthropology seeks to
understand universals and variations in human cultures both past and present.
Archaeology seeks to understand
human history through the study (primarily) of materials remains. Sometimes the work of archaeologists overlaps with the work of historians in a specialization, historical archaeology.
Linguistics seeks to understand
human language, written and nonwritten, spoken and non-verbal. The study of how languages change over time is termed historical linguistics. The study of how language is used in social contexts is termed sociolinguistics.
Ethnology seeks to understand the
patterns of human thought and behavior over time. A holistic, detailed description of a culture is termed an ethnography.
Underscoring all of the sub-fields in
both biological and cultural anthropology is Practicing or Applied anthropology, which seek to apply anthropological knowledge to the solution of human problems. All of the sub-fields in anthropology have an applied, practicing component.
FURTHER COMMON DIVISIONS
WITHIN ANTHROPOLOGY INCLUDE:
(1) area specializations (SE Asia,
Europe, Latin American, etc.; areas
which share some cultural-historical characteristics ) (2) topic specializations (medical, ecological, gender, etc.; themes upon which to focus within a holistic and deeply contextual framework of a culture)
The Journal of Hindu Studies Volume Issue 2014 (Doi 10.1093/jhs/hiu020) Acri, A. - Pancaku Ika and Kanda Mpat - From A P  Upata Myth To Balinese Folklore
Virginia Heyer Young - Ruth Benedict - Beyond Relativity, Beyond Pattern (Critical Studies in The History of Anthropology) - University of Nebraska Press (2005)