For the latest, see Anthropology Blogs 2021!
The anthropology blogs included below are the ones cataloged in 2019 and that had published since October 2018. For a great live-feed experience, bookmark the Anthropology Newspaper from antropologi.info.
For Anthropology Blogs from previous years:
- Anthropology Blogging 2018 featured the book by Paul Stoller, Adventures in Blogging: Public Anthropology and Popular Media.
- Anthro Blogs 2017 when the anthropology blogs theme was “Anthropology Matters.”
- Anthropology Archive Blogs 2016 featured the debut of the Sapiens Wenner-Gren blog.
- Anthro Blogging 2015 may have been the high-point for the number of independent anthropology blogs.
- Anthro Archive Blogs 2014 a time when anthropology blogs wrestled with critical social issues.
- Archive Blogs in Anthropology 2013 when anthropology blogs helped create the This is Anthropology initiative.
- Anthropology 2012, the launch year for my project tracking anthropology blogs.
And for blog posts about blogging in anthropology, please see the Anthro Blogs category on this website.
Thank you & enjoy the anthropology blogs!
01anthropology
DANG, the Digital Anthropology Group
Aidnography: Reflections on development, communication & (social) media
Eclectic mix of reflections on international development, anthropology blogs and academic research.
Alberto Acerbi – Cognitive/Evolutionary Anthropology
Alberto Acerbi is a cognitive/evolutionary anthropologist with a particular interest in computational science.
All Tomorrow’s Cultures
Occasional posts on anthropologically interesting science fiction and anthropological futures by Samuel Gerald Collins. Collins is the author of All Tomorrow’s Cultures: Anthropological Engagements with the Future
Allegra: A Virtual Laboratory of Legal Anthropology
The site pushes the boundaries of scholarly representations of ‘the law’ in the broadest sense. In addition to viewing the law as a site of normative engagement, we examine its knowledge pratices, authority claims, notions of subjectivity and agency.
Alma Gottlieb
Alma Gottlieb is a cultural anthropologist, researcher, author, and teacher impassioned by understanding all things human. Author of many books, her World of Babies: Imagined Childcare Guides for Eight Societies is now in its eighth edition.
Andy White – Anthropology
Andy White is an anthropological archaeologist with interests in hunter-gatherers, lithic technology, human evolution, and complex systems theory.
Animal Archaeology
All things archaeology, but mostly dead animals. Alex Fitzpatrick is a zooarchaeologist and PhD student at the University of Bradford in England.
anthro{dendum}
anthro{dendum} is a blog about sociocultural anthropology. Formerly known as Savage Minds, contributors have been blogging since 2005. All posts from before November 28, 2017 are archived at the previous site.
Anthroecology
A blog about anthropology, ecology, fieldwork, and the future of the planet. By anthropologist Helga Vierich.
Anthropod – What a cultural anthropologist thinks about
Anthropod is a blog documenting how a cultural anthropologist thinks about research, teaching, and the ways that we live in and shape the world around us. By Lorena Gibson, an anthropologist and musician based in Wellington, Aotearoa New Zealand.
Anthropolitan
Anthropolitan Online: The student-run blog of UCL Anthropology’s biannual departmental magazine.
Anthropoliteia – critical perspectives on police, security, crime, law & punishment
Anthropology blogs about police, policing and security from an anthropological perspective. Focuses on policing as a useful nexus for exploring questions in both political anthropology and the anthropology of morality.
Anthropological Observations on economics, politics, & daily life
Edward Fischer is Professor of Anthropology and Director of the Center for Latin American Studies at Vanderbilt University. Works at the intersection of anthropology and political economy. Author of The Good Life: Aspiration, Dignity, and the Anthropology of Wellbeing
Anthropologist on the Street
Anthropologist on the Street (AOTS) goes behind today’s controversies, debates, and trending issues to examine the hidden cultural forces at play. Each week, Dr. Carie Little Hersh interviews a different anthropologist or cultural expert to unveil what doesn’t get reported in the headlines: the underlying values, conversations, and practices of everyday life.
Anthropologizing – Amy L. Santee
Anthropologizing features a mixed-bag of posts on applied social research, business anthropology, design and user experience research, social observations, and other topics by Portland-based anthropologist and design researcher Amy L. Santee.
Anthropology 365: Thinking about life anthropologically
Joined the anthropology blogs in 2017: Themes of cultural reproduction, hegemony, science studies, primatology, knowledge production.
Anthropology As…. Life, the Universe, and Anthropology
Sarah Shulist & Katie Biittner aim to demonstrate anthropology as a force in everyday life, and to unabashedly and unashamedly show that anthropology IS awesome.
Anthropology in Practice – Krystal D’Costa
Examines the relationships we share with each other and the world-at-large by drawing on anthropological theory to explain practical, everyday events and behaviors. Invites everyone to consider and discuss the world in terms of ethnography and history.
Anthropology of Smart Phones & Smart Ageing (ASSA)
This five-year project at UCL Anthropology employs a team of ten anthropologists who work on a collaborative and comparative project based on simultaneous 16 month ethnographies. This project investigates fundamental changes in people’s relationship to age and health associated with the global rise of the smartphone.
The Anthropo.scene: Making up the ‘world’ with what we have on hand
Jeremy Schmidt is a Banting Fellow in the Department of Sociology and Social Anthropology at Dalhousie University. Research expertise supports policy change and public awareness on issues of justice and water rights.
AnthroPunk
AnthroPunk at Medium blog examines anthropological human and human systems issues as they relate to burgeoning or established algorithm, automation, and artificial intelligence technologies in the context of contemporary life.
Antropologia 2.0 – Your website of applied anthropology
We believe in the usefulness of an anthropology upgraded to the 21st century. An anthropology that is applied and committed to social reality. And that is capable of assuming and responding to the challenges of today and tomorrow.
Antropologia: una perspectiva multiple, por Gabriela Vargas-Cetina, antropologa
¿Cual es el rol de la antropologia en el siglo XXI? Nuestra disciplina parece estar situada en una posicion privilegiada para el mundo actual. Puesto que nos ocupamos de conocer la vida cotidiana y las formas de ver el mundo de quienes habitan este planeta, tenemos las herramientas necesarias para analizar los rapidos cambios por los que nuestro mundo está atravesando, desde las nuevas formas de comunicación instantanea hasta el calentamiento global y la predominacion de las corporaciones en la economia mundial. Author of Beautiful Politics of Music: Trova in Yucatán, Mexico
El Antropólogo Perplejo
An anthropologist without concern is not an anthropologist at all. José Mansilla: Doctorando dentro del Programa de Procesos de Control Social: Trabajo, Exclusiones y Violencia con una Tesis sobre migración y redes de solidaridad en Poble Nou, Barcelona.
El Antropólogo Principiante
En este blog encontrarás temas relacionados con la antropología y mi experiencia como estudiante en la Uned.
ArchaeoBlog
Serving up old news (i.e., archaeology) since A.D. 2004!
Archaeogaming – Exploring the archaeology of (and in) video games
Archaeogaming is a blog dedicated to the discussion of the archaeology both of and in video games (console, computer, mobile).
Archaeology and Material Culture – The Material World
Paul Mullins is a historical archaeologist who studies consumer culture in the last half-millennium. This includes research on the intersection of material consumption and the color line; race and urban renewal; the emergence of consumer society in northern Europe; Victorian decorative material culture; and the relationship between popular culture and materiality in the contemporary world. Author of The Archaeology of Consumer Culture.
Archaeology Review (previously, “A Hot Cup of Joe”)
Carl Feagans is a graduate of the University of Texas at Arlington’s anthropology program. Among academic interests are the religious and cult beliefs of prehistoric peoples, particularly in the Near East around the Pre-Pottery Neolithic. Also fascinated with cognitive archaeology and early information storage.
ArcheoThoughts – Andre Costopoulos, University of Alberta
Reflections on archaeology in general, with an emphasis on academic publishing, evolutionary theory, and claims of surprisingly early sites in any region.
Arctic Anthropology
Updates and news from Northern Anthropology of Circumpolar Regions. Several Arctic anthropologists, mostly based in Rovaniemi, Lapland, Finland, have created a platform that allows us to communicate our ideas.
The Association for the Anthropology of Policy (ASAP)
ASAP promotes the anthropological study of policy, including its making, workings, and effects, and seeks to advance the contributions of the anthropology of policy to theory and method in anthropology, as well as to research in public policy.
Association of Social Anthropologists of Aotearoa / New Zealand
ASAA/NZ is a vibrant community of anthropologists who are from, work in, or are interested in issues related to Aotearoa/New Zealand and the wider Asia-Pacific region.
The Bioarchaeology of Childhood
Siân Halcrow is a bioarchaeologist with a research interest in all things to do with infants and children. Research addresses central archaeological questions of the intensification of agriculture and human responses to this seminal time in prehistory, with regional interests in prehistoric Southeast Asia and South America.
Biological anthropology, war & health, growth & nutrition – Patrick F. Clarkin, Ph.D.
Mostly about biological anthropology. Other topics: evolution, war, conflict and cooperation, health, nutrition, and the Hmong/Southeast Asian refugee diaspora. Patrick Clarkin is a biological anthropologist and associate professor at U.Massachusetts-Boston.
Bone Broke – Archaeology, Biological Anthropology & Grad School
Posts on Archaeology, Osteology & Biological Anthropology by Jess Beck
Brave New Words by Dr. Piers Kelly
On the trail of linguistic creativity in Asia and Australia. Dr Piers Kelly is a linguistic anthropologist at the School of Language Studies, The Australian National University, Canberra.
CaMP Anthropology–Communication, Media, Performance
CaMP Anthropology feature posts, discussions, and links at the intersections of communication, media, and performance. Based in the Indiana University’s Anthropology Department, we welcome submissions exploring theory, scholarship, application, and methodology in these emerging fields.
Carlos García Mora, Etnólogo
Catálogo y consulta de textos personales. Etnólogo mexicano del Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia.
Citizen Sociolinguistics
A blog by Betsy Rymes, Professor of Educational Linguistics at the University of Pennsylvania. Blog aims to become a place for sharing everyday encounters with language and engaging in dialog about different ways of speaking and attitudes about them–that is, a place for Citizen Sociolinguistics.
C L O S E R: Anthropology of Muslims in Europe
Martijn de Koning currently works in the Department of Islam and Arab Studies at the Faculty of Religious Studies, Radboud University, Nijmegen.
Connected in Cairo
Growing up Cosmopolitan in the Middle East. Featuring news and information about globalization and the modern Middle East, based on the ideas and concepts in the book Connected in Cairo. Mark Allen Peterson’s research interests are ethnography of communication, mass media, information technologies, nationalism, transnationalism and globalization, semiotics, drama and spectacle.
El Cor de les Aparences
Bloc de Manuel Delgado.
Cultural Heritage Informatics Initiative
Hosted by the Department of Anthropology, The Cultural Heritage Informatics Initiative is a platform for interdisciplinary scholarly collaboration at Michigan State University. Strives to equip students with the practical and analytical skills necessary to creatively apply information and communication technologies to cultural heritage materials.
Cultural Influence Blog
Drs. Dana L. Pertermann and Mark A. Neels collaborate on research in military history, politics, and culture. They are currently both college professors in Wyoming. They blog weekly about the past, the present, and the future of the U.S. and the world.
Culture & Capitalism – A Sussex Anthropology Blog
This blog was created by students and faculty of the MA in the Social Anthropology of the Global Economy (SAGE) at the University of Sussex in Brighton, UK.
CultureBy – Grant McCracken
At the intersection of Anthropology and Economics. Trained as an anthropologist, Grant has studied American culture and business for 25 years. He has taught anthropology at the University of Cambridge, ethnography at MIT, and marketing at the Harvard Business School. He is a long time student of culture and commerce.
Cyber Anthropology
Anthropology of gaming, blogging, social networking, online communities and so much more! Diana Harrelson writes on cyber anthropology, human computer interaction, user experience design, gaming and various other topics.
decasia: critique of academic culture
Eli Thorkelson works on anthropology of universities in France and the United States.
Display Adaptability: Adapting to Change in the 21st Century
Kathleen E. Fuller is an expert in the study of human origins and adaptations. The purpose of this blog is to discuss in a more informal manner topics that are important to an individual’s health and success.
Donna Lanclos – The Anthropologist in the Stacks
Donna Lanclos is an anthropologist and a folklorist who has been working in academic libraries starting in 2009. She thinks, writes, and talks about the nature of information, digital and physical places, and higher education generally.
Doug’s Archaeology: Investigating the Profession & Research
Doug Rocks-Macqueen: This is my blog were I focus mainly on the Profession of Archaeology e.g. pay, working conditions, career prospects, etc. Though I do on occasion throw in some other topics and some bits on Open Access.
Ecrire l’histoire de ceux qui n’en ont pas
The goal of Paul Wormser’s blog is to make the results of recent world history research more accessible for the general public. It mostly deals with regions at the margins of text-producing states in Africa, the Americas, Asia, Eastern and Northern Europe and the Pacific. It brings together the sciences of the human past to go beyond the blind spots of standard world history narratives.
Elfshot – Sticks & Stones, Understanding the archaeological record
Tim Rast is a Canadian archaeologist and a flintknapper who specializes in artifact reproductions and knapped jewelry based on artifacts found across the Arctic and Subarctic, with an emphasis on Newfoundland and Labrador.
Engagement – Blog of the Anthropology & Environment Society
Engagement features first-hand accounts by anthropologists and other social scientists broadly concerned with the cause of social and ecological justice. The blog aims to bring an anthropological approach to understanding the pressing environmental issues of our time, targeting a broad audience of scholars, educators, artists, and advocates.
Entomophagy Anthropology – Julie Lesnik
Julie Lesnik received her PhD studying the role of termites in the diet of fossil hominins and has since started exploring insects as food more broadly.
EPIC – Advancing the Value of Ethnography in Industry
EPIC is dedicated to providing practitioners, businesses, and partner organizations with access to the best practical ethnographic expertise from around the world.
Eriksen’s Blog
Thomas Hylland Eriksen’s blog is a companion to his Engaging with the world website. Eriksen is the author of Overheating: An Anthropology of Accelerated Change.
The Ethnographic Mind
Exploring Ethnographic Thinking in All its Forms. A blog by Jay Hasbrouck, author of Ethnographic Thinking: From Method to Mindset.
Ethnography.com
We seek to change the way the world thinks about the Social Sciences in general and ethnography in particular. We believe that telling good stories as social commentary is at the heart of what social science should do. We also think that social sciences don’t always do this, which is why we need this blog.
The Evolutionary Studies Consortium
The Evolutionary Studies (EvoS) Consortium is designed to facilitate the development and implementation of Evolutionary Studies Programs. An Evolutionary Studies Program introduces students from all majors to evolutionary theory early in their academic careers.
The Familiar Strange: A blog. A podcast. A social fact.
We want to familiarise you with the strange, after estranging you with the familiar. This is an anthropology social engagement project.
Fieldsights
The Fieldsights section of the Cultural Anthropology website was launched in 2012 and includes a number of content streams that, while not peer-reviewed, have extended the scope and reach of the Society for Cultural Anthropology’s (SCA) publishing program.
Financial Times – Gillian Tett
Gillian Tett is markets and finance commentator and an assistant editor of the Financial Times. Tett earned a PhD in social anthropology at Clare College, Cambridge based on field research in Tajikistan in the former Soviet Union. Tett is the author of The Silo Effect: The Peril of Expertise and the Promise of Breaking Down Barriers
Focaal Blog: Journal of Global and Historical Anthropology
FocaalBlog is associated with Focaal: Journal of Global and Historical Anthropology. It aims to accelerate and intensify anthropological conversations beyond what a regular academic journal can do, and to make them more widely, globally, and swiftly available.
Fongoli Savanna Chimpanzee Project
Jill D. Pruetz is the principal investigator of the Fongoli Savanna Chimpanzee Project, the longest-running research study of its kind in Senegal, West Africa.
Food Anthropology
Blog of The Society for the Anthropology of Food and Nutrition (SAFN), formerly known as the Council on Nutritional Anthropology (CNA), organized in 1974 in response to the increased interest in the interface between social sciences and human nutrition.
Footnotes. Multimodal – Anticolonial – Iconoclastic
Like academic footnotes, this group anthropology blog supplements the “main text” as a multimodal, anticolonial, and iconoclastic project.
Forests & Oceans for the Future
Forests and Oceans for the Future is a research group based at UBC that focuses on ecological knowledge research conducted in collaboration with north coast British Columbia communities.
The Geek Anthropologist
The Geek Anthropologist is a blog where geek culture and all things geek are analysed through the perspective of socio-cultural anthropology. We write about the intersections between social science, cultural analysis and practice of anthropology with geek culture, whether they be embodied, literary, cinematic or cybernetic.
Glossographia – Anthropology, linguistics, & prehistory
Dedicated to the interdisciplinary study of language from a social scientific perspective. Stephen Chrisomalis is a linguistic anthropologist and cognitive anthropologist working at Wayne State University in Detroit, Michigan. At the intersection of linguistics, archaeology, anthropology, cognitive science, and evolution, with particular foci on epigraphy, literacy studies, writing systems, numeration, and the history of science and mathematics. Author of the December 2020 Reckonings: Numerals, Cognition, and History
Guava Anthropology – Taiwanese Anthropologists
GUAVA anthropology covers things that are Grotesque, Unabashed, Apostate, Virid, and Auspicious about anthropology!
HawgBlawg – Broadcasts from NW Arkansas: Razorback Country
Ted Swedenburg is Professor of Anthropology, University of Arkansas. Author of Memories of Revolt: The 1936-39 Rebellion and the Palestinian National Past.
How to be an Anthropologist
Being an anthropologist today is not what you might expect. Building on a legacy of reflection and critical thought, we thrive in the complex and the particular. As an anthropologist, I aim to align myself with web developers to flesh out our common interests and anxieties to enrich both anthropological and technical knowledge.
The Human Evolution Blog
Professor Nathan H. Lents and his students discuss human origins. Lents is a Professor of Molecular Biology at John Jay College of The City University of New York and author of Human Errors: A Panorama of Our Glitches, from Pointless Bones to Broken Genes.
International Cognition and Culture Institute
The website of the International Cognition & Culture Institute has, as permanent features, a blog section meant to stimulate and a news section meant to inform. We also organize online workshops, book-clubs, and other events.
ISS Archaeology: Boldly Going Where No Archaeologists Have Gone Before
Our project is the first archaeological study of a space habitat–in this case, the International Space Station (ISS). We seek to understand evolving cultural, social, and material structures in the ISS’s unique context.
John Hawks Weblog – Paleoanthropology, genetics & evolution
Tracking research into human origins, from the field to the laboratory.
Krazy Kioti: The Gene Anderson Webpage
I have been working on resource- and development-related issues for the last thirty-five years. My field is cultural and political ecology.
Kristina Kilgrove at Forbes
As a bioarchaeologist, I routinely pore over the skeletons of ancient populations so that I can learn about their health, diet, and lifestyles. Most of my research focuses on understanding the ancient Romans whose lives didn’t make it into history books. I did my PhD in anthropology and MA in classical archaeology. See also Powered by Osteons.
Lactation Journey Blog – Acquanda Y. Stanford
Acquanda Stanford: Is a Sociocultural Anthropologist (PhD Student), and writes the Lactation Journey Blog, which focuses on the social, political and cultural aspects of breatfeeding among people of the African Diaspora in the United States.
Language Log
Language Log was started in the summer of 2003 by Mark Liberman and Geoffrey Pullum.
Leiden Anthropology Blog
The Leiden Anthropology Blog is written by scholars at the Institute of Cultural Anthropology and Development Sociology at Leiden University. They write anthropology blogs about their research, teaching in the Bachelor and Master program, and share anthropological perspectives on a wide range of social issues.
Living Anthropologically: Anthropology – Understanding – Possibility
Living Anthropologically means documenting history, interconnection, and power during a time of global transformation. We need to care for others as we attempt to build a world together. Jason Antrosio is Professor and Chair of Anthropology at Hartwick College. He is the co-author of Fast, Easy, and In Cash: Artisan Hardship and Hope in the Global Economy with Rudi Colloredo-Mansfeld, and co-editor of Open Anthropology with Sallie Han.
Mammals Suck… Milk! – by Dr. Katie Hind
This blog showcases and synthesizes (pun intended!) the MANY awesome advances currently occurring in milk research from the molecule to the organism to the population to the taxon, with implications for nutrition, medicine, psychology, and evolutionary biology.
Material World – A Global Hub for Thinking About Things
Material World is an interactive, online hub for contemporary debates, discussion, thinking and research centred on material and visual culture. It is the brainchild of scholars working in the anthropology departments of University College London and New York University, but aims to create a new international community of academics, students, curators, artists and anyone else with particular interests in material and visual culture.
Matt Artz – User Researcher & Product Manager
Matt Artz is an applied anthropologist working at the intersection of project management and user experience.
metooanthro
metooanthro is a collective of anthropologists working to make our shared discipline a safer, more just space. Join us.
Medizinethnologie – Körper, Gesundheit und Heilung in einer globalisierten Welt
The blog is run by the Work Group Medical Anthropology in the German Anthropological Association. It publishes texts (in German) on the anthropology of transnational health interventions; migration, mobility and health; and the encounters between different medical ideas and practices in an interconnected world.
The Memory Bank – A New Commonwealth Ver 5.0
The two great memory banks are language and money. Exchange of meanings through language and of objects through money are now converging in a single network of communication, the internet. We must learn how to use this digital revolution to advance the human conversation about a better world. Our political task is to make a world society fit for all humanity.
The Mermaid’s Tale
A conversation about the nature of genetic causation in evolution, development and ecology. Includes discussions of the public perception of science and evolution and covers other subfields of biological anthropology, particularly paleoanthropology. Authored by three biological anthropologists, Ken Weiss, Anne Buchanan, and Holly Dunsworth, and co-authors of the book, The Mermaid’s Tale: Four Billion Years of Cooperation in the Making of Living Things.
Middle Savagery – Colleen Morgan
Middle Savagery is an accumulation of over thirteen years of thinking about archaeology, art, and digital media.
Mocking the Apocalypse – A Commentary on Culture
A blog featuring cultural commentaries, media reviews, and short essays aimed at starting discussions about the everyday social issues that continue to plague us.
Most Holy Death
Exploring the fastest growing popular faith in the Americas: La Santa Muerte. Dr. R. Andrew Chesnut, Bishop Walter Sullivan Chair in Catholic Studies at Virginia Commonwealth University, in collaboration with David Metcalfe, and Liminal Analytics, presents a multi-faceted exploration of the sanctification of death in the popular faith traditions of the Americas. Chesnut is the author of Devoted to Death: Santa Muerte, the Skeleton Saint.
MSU Campus Archaeology Program Blog
MSU Campus Archaeology is a program that works to mitigate and protect the archaeological resources on Michigan State University’s beautiful and historic campus.
Museum Fatigue – in a Society of the Spectacle
I’m hoping this blog might be part of the cure for museum fatigue. David Davies is associate professor of anthropology and director of East Asian Studies at Hamline University.
N=1 | Opening black boxes, one at a time…
An anthropology blog by Matthew Wolf-Meyer, associate professor of anthropology at Binghamton University and author of Theory for the World to Come: Speculative Fiction and Apocalyptic Anthropology.
The Naked Anthropologist
Dr. Laura Agustín on Migration, Trafficking and the Rescue Industry. Author of Sex at the Margins: Migration, Labour Markets and the Rescue Industry.
The New Ethnographer
A space for sharing and analysing the contemporary challenges of anthropological research. The New Ethnographer is an online project collecting testimonies about what it means to be challenged by research.
Northwest Coast Archaeology – Quentin Mackie
To encourage public knowledge about, and appreciation of, Northwest Coast Archaeology through examples of interesting finds and sites, or through commentaries on archaeology in the news or otherwise in the public domain.
On the Brink – Andi Simon
Andi Simon is a Corporate Anthropologist & the author of the leadership book On The Brink: A Fresh Lens to Take Your Business to New Heights.
Paul Stoller began a new blog in 2019 on Psychology Today, The Path to Well Being after a long-running blog on the Huffington Post. In 2018 Stoller also opened Writing, World, and Well Being. Paul Stoller is a writer and anthropologist who likes to tell and listen to stories. He is the author of 15 books, the latest of which is Adventures in Blogging: Public Anthropology and Popular Media.
Pedal Powered Anthropology
Pedal Powered Anthropology is a multimedia-based educational project dedicated to making science and academia more accessible while bringing profound travel experiences to a local level.
Pedes in terra ad sidera visus (Los pies en la tierra y la mirada en el cielo)
Pedro Maya Álvarez: Antropólogo, empresario y observador del impacto de las nuevas tecnologías en la vida y las relaciones sociales.
Peregrination: The Ethnography of Shaligram Shila
This blog is comprised of thoughts and commentary regarding the interpretive and ritual practices of the sacred stones called Shaligram.
[Per]Suit of Anthropology
Dedicated to the exploration of modern business trends and perspectives from the view of the anthropologist. Business and Anthropology have more in common and more to learn from one another than readily acknowledged. Topics include Western business practices and the impact of those decisions on socio-cultural institutions worldwide.
Perspectives in Anthropology – Open-Access Anthropological Publications
Perspectives in Anthropology is an online publication series that launched in 2014. The series specializes in articles on Social, Cultural, Medical, Urban and Visual Anthropology which are available online as open-access and free-to-read.
Philbu’s Blog – Philipp Budka, Social & cultural anthropologist from Vienna
Anthropology blogs on media and technology, Indigenous internet practices and media, technology enhanced learning and ethnographic fieldwork.
Platypus – The CASTAC Blog
Platypus, the newly renamed CASTAC Blog (Committee on the Anthropology of Science, Technology, and Computing), is a web log for discussion and exchange on anthropological studies of science and technology as social phenomena.
PopAnth – Hot Buttered Humanity – Popular Anthropology
Popular anthropology for everyone. Exploring the familiar and the strange, demystifying and myth busting human culture, biology and behaviour in all times and places. Myths, music, art, archaeology, language, food, festivals, fun. Welcome to the Anthropocene!
Powered by Osteons
Kristina Kilgrove is a bioarchaeologist at the University of West Florida. This is her personal blog about archaeology, bioanthropology, and the classical world. See also Kristina Kilgrove at Forbes.
Practicing Anthropology
Blog of NAPA, the National Association for the Practice of Anthropology.
Public Anthropologist
Public Anthropologist opens the possibility for dialogue and debates that are timely, and socially and politically challenging. It aims at creating a hybrid, critical space between the ponderous nature of traditional academic journals and the immediacy of blogs, newspapers, and experts’ accounts.
Publishing Archaeology
Information and opinions on professional publishing issues in archaeology. Especially concerned with quality control, Open Access, and communication with other disciplines. Michael E. Smith is an archaeologist who works on Aztec sites, with an interest in comparative research on cities, households, empires, and city-states. Co-editor of Ten Thousand Years of Inequality: The Archaeology of Wealth Differences. See also Wide Urban World.
Raving Anthropology
Stories and highlights from ethnographic field work and interviews on the subject of drug use, drug policy, harm reduction and dance music culture in Toronto and Vancouver.
relevANTH – Seeing the relevance of anthropology in everyday life
Dr. Carie Little Hersh is an American cultural anthropologist, former attorney, and teaching professor in Anthropology at Northeastern University. This is her personal blog about anthropology and its relevance to everyday life.
The Rockstar Anthropologist – Where anthropology comes to chat
Myeashea Alexander is a physical anthropology grad student and science and art enthusiast. This blog is to de-mystify the WORLD of ANTHROPOLOGY! This all-inclusive discipline needs better PR (and anthropology blogs).
Rust Belt Anthro
Contemporary Archaeology and Anthropology in the Postindustrial United States. Kaeleigh Herstad is a PhD candidate in the department of anthropology at Indiana University and technical editor of the Journal of Community Archaeology and Heritage.
Sam Grace – talks to imaginary anthropologists
A blog by Samantha L. Grace, a PhD in sociocultural anthropology from the University of Arizona.
SAPIENS – Anthropology / Everything Human
SAPIENS aims to transform how the public understands anthropology. Every piece of content is grounded in anthropological research, theories, or thinking. We present stories and perspectives that are authoritative, accessible, and relevant–but still lively and entertaining.
Sara Perry – The Archaeological Eye
Dr Sara Perry is the Director of Studies of Digital Heritage, Director of Studies of Archaeological Information Systems, and Lecturer in Cultural Heritage Management in the Department of Archaeology at the University of York (UK).
Sarah Kendzior – Digital Media and Politics
Sarah Kendzior is a writer who lives in St Louis, Missouri. She is known for her best-selling essay collection The View From Flyover Country, reporting on political and economic problems in the US, prescient coverage of the 2016 election and the Trump administration, and academic research on authoritarian states in Central Asia. Kendzior is the co-host of Gaslit Nation, a weekly podcast which covers corruption in the Trump administration and the rise of authoritarianism around the world. Kendzior’s most recent book is Hiding in Plain Sight: The Invention of Donald Trump and the Erosion of America.
Shreds and Patches – Jason Baird Jackson
I am an ethnographer and ethnologist whose work is centered in the fields of folklore studies and cultural anthropology. I have collaborated with Native American communities in Oklahoma since 1993, when I began a lifelong personal and research relationship with the Euchee/Yuchi people. Since 2013, I have served as Director of the Mathers Museum of World Cultures at Indiana University, where I am also a Professor of Folklore and Anthropology.
Silent Anthropology
An anthropologist discusses medicine, healthcare, race, politics, and much more. By David S. Lowry, a Lumbee Indian anthropologist.
Sindre Bangstad – A Social Anthropologist In Search of Parrhesia
Sindre Bangstad is a social anthropologist currently affiliated with the Faculty of Theology at the University of Oslo in Norway. This site features posts related to areas of research such as secularism, Islam and Islamophobia, hate speech as well as religion and the public sphere. Bangstad is the editor of Anthropology of Our Times: An Edited Anthology in Public Anthropology.
SLA Blog – Society for Linguistic Anthropology
The SLA Blog features a monthly blog post written by scholars and students of linguistic anthropology. The SLA Blog is a space to showcase pieces written by SLA members at any stage in their career.
Society for Visual Anthropology (SVA)
We promote study of visual representation and media. Works in film, video, photography, and computer-based multimedia explore signification, perception, and communication-in-context, as well as a multitude of other anthropological and ethnographic themes.
Somatosphere – Science, Medicine, & Anthropology
A collaborative website covering the intersections of medical anthropology, science and technology studies, cultural psychiatry, psychology and bioethics. Founded in 2008 by a small group of medical anthropologists, Somatosphere has grown to become a key online forum for debate and discussion in medical anthropology, as well as in the humanities and social sciences of health and medicine more broadly.
stadtgeselle – Urban Anthropology & New Identities Meet Politics of Culture
Michael Anranter, Political scientist and cultural-social anthropologist in Vienna. Stadtgeselle may best translate as “urban apprentice.” Connects personal experiences, anthropological and political knowledge with the objective of exploring relations of identity and space. Weekly in German or English.
Standplaats Wereld – Nederland en de Wereld in Antropologisch Perspectief
A platform for informative, provocative, or surprising opinions about topical issues in the Netherlands and the rest of the world, viewed from an anthropological perspective. Contributions come from students and staff of the department of Social and Cultural Anthropology at VU University Amsterdam.
The Superorganic – Barry R. Bainton
Dedicated to Applied Anthropology and the anthropological exploration of the human species and its environment. Our goal is to describe and understand the evolution and dynamics of humanity and its superorganic manifestations through the anthropological lens and how this understanding can be used to improve the quality of human life.
Teaching Anthropology Blog
Teaching Anthropology is a peer-reviewed, open-access journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute dedicated to the teaching of anthropology. The Teaching Anthropology blog has information about projects, research, and other issues relevant to the teaching of anthropology.
Teaching Culture
The purpose of this blog is to build a community of anthropologists interested in pedagogy and to provide them with a reputable source of information and a way to share news on teaching anthropology, publishing in the field, new innovations, new books, and anthropology blogs.
This Anthro Life – Podcasting Complex Worlds through Public Conversations
We use our training to show how complex our world truly is and how that’s a beautiful thing. We expose injustices by revealing often hidden assumptions in everyday language, technology use, or body gestures. We are driven by the values of increasing social consciousness, acceptance and promotion of diversity, honest inquiry, and promote these in an inclusive, entertaining way.
Traditions of Conflict
Comments on Evolutionary Anthropology. Cultural traditions and conflict patterns. William Buckner is a student of Evolutionary Anthropology at UC Davis.
trinketization: things that don’t fit in the attic
Things that don’t fit in the attic, collected bits, some new writing (John Hutnyk) and some snips from others. Answers to all questions about trinkets, and Capital.
Una antropóloga en la luna: blog de antropología
Noemí. Educadora social y antropóloga social y cultural.
Violent Metaphors – Thoughts from the intersection of science, pseudoscience, & conflict
Jennifer Raff is assistant professor at the University of Kansas, in the department of Anthropology. Studies the genomes of contemporary and ancient peoples in order to uncover details of human prehistory.
Visual Anthropology of Japan
In the spirit of open-text, collaboration, communication and good anthropology… Visual Anthropology of Japan explores Japanese culture through photography, film and other visual methods.
The Wenner Gren Blog
The Wenner-Gren Foundation for Anthropological Research, Inc. is a private operating foundation dedicated to the advancement of anthropology throughout the world.
Wide Urban World
Cities as viewed from a broad historical and comparative perspective. As Winston Churchill said, “The farther back we look, the farther ahead we can see.” A blog by Michael E. Smith (see also Publishing Archaeology).
Youth Circulations
Youth Circulations is a nexus for research, art and activism around youth mobility and the politics of representation. Born of a shared frustration over media portrayals of young migrants and their families, we offer here a curated collection of these images and, in response, a meaningful and necessarily global critique. See Lauren Heidbrink’s Migranthood: Youth in a New Era of Deportation.
Zachary Blair
Urban Development, Violence, Political Economy, Multiculturalism