Anthropology is the study of human life, at the intersection of the sciences and the humanities. Anthropology encompasses human biology and evolution, archaeology, culture, and language. See also What is Anthropology for more.
The Anthropology chapters of Living Anthropologically are an introduction to anthropology, with comments on contemporary issues and theory. The chapters are cross-referenced to blog posts and other resources.
Part 1: Human Nature, Race, Evolution
1.2 Evolution and natural selection, anthropologically
1.3 Racism and biological anthropology
1.4 Human skulls: Boas head shape studies revalidated
1.5 Race revival
1.6 “Race Reconciled” re-debunks race
1.7 Race becomes biology
1.8 So many primates for primatology
1.9 Bipedalism is also called walking
1.10 Stone tools for 2.5 million years
1.11 Denisovans and Neandertals as human races
1.12 More mothers than Mitochondrial Eve
1.13 Human biologies
Part 2: Domesticaton, Agriculture, and Civilization
2.2 Many ways of gathering and hunting
2.4 The many origins of agriculture
2.5 More than Guns, Germs, and Steel
Part 3: Culture, Cultures, Cultural Relativism
Cultural Relativism 2011 – DSK, Guinea, Anthropology 101
Culture Doesn’t Matter
Cosmo and Cosmopolitanism
Doubling-Down on Culture in Anthropology
Part 4: Language and Languages
Part 5: Sex, Gender, Family
Part 6: Moral Optimism
For a preview and to comment on the draft in progress see:
Anthropology, Moral Optimism, and Capitalism: A Four-Field Manifesto
Anthropology documents human possibility and creativity to effect change. See Anthropology and Moral Optimism for free PowerPoint download.
Author
Jason Antrosio
Associate Professor
Hartwick College
Follow @JasonAntrosio
Moral Optimism
At the end of the day, in this age where futures are murky and utopias mere reminders of a lost innocence, we need to fall back on the moral optimism that has been anthropology’s greatest—yet underscored—appeal. But we need to separate that optimism from the naïveté that has been liberalism’s most convenient shield. We need to assume it as a choice—whether we call it moral, philosophical, or aesthetic in the best sense. We need to hang on to it not because we are historically, socially, or politically naïve—indeed, as social scientists we cannot afford such naïveté—but because this is the side of humanity that we choose to prefer, and because this choice is what moved us to anthropology in the first place. We need to assume this optimism because the alternatives are lousy, and because anthropology as a discipline is the best venue through which the West can show an undying faith in the richness and variability of humankind.
-- Michel-Rolph Trouillot, Global Transformations(2003:139)
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Related Blogs
Visit Anthropology Report for a comprehensive list of blogs and updates on anthropology. For applying anthropology to local issues, see the Local is Possible.





