What is Anthropology?
1.0 What is Anthropology?
🧭 Overview
🧠 One-sentence thesis
Anthropology is a uniquely broad discipline that investigates everything that makes us human—from culture and language to material remains and evolution—through four interconnected subfields that together provide a multi-faceted picture of the human condition.
📌 Key points (3–5)
- What anthropology studies: everything that makes us human, including culture, language, material remains, and human evolution.
- The four subfields in the U.S.: cultural anthropology, archaeology, biological (physical) anthropology, and linguistic anthropology.
- Common confusion: anthropology is structured differently around the world—in the U.K. and Europe, cultural anthropology is called social anthropology and the subfields are often separate disciplines; in Mexico, anthropology focuses more on cultural and indigenous heritage within the country.
- Cultural anthropology's approach: studying similarities and differences among living societies through immersive fieldwork, suspending one's own sense of "normal" to understand other perspectives.
- Why it matters: anthropology addresses compelling questions about human origins, diversity, commonalities, and change over time, and can be applied to solve practical problems.
🌍 The scope and structure of anthropology
🔍 What anthropology investigates
Anthropology: the study of human beings.
- Anthropologists investigate "everything and anything that makes us human."
- The discipline examines every dimension of humanity through broad questions:
- How did we come to be human and who are our ancestors?
- Why do people look and act so differently throughout the world?
- What do we all have in common?
- How have we changed culturally and biologically over time?
- What factors influence diverse human beliefs and behaviors?
- These questions are intentionally expansive, reflecting anthropology's comprehensive approach.
🧩 The four subfields in the United States
The U.S. organizes anthropology as a "four-field discipline":
| Subfield | Focus |
|---|---|
| Cultural anthropology | Similarities and differences among living societies and cultural groups |
| Archaeology | (Not detailed in excerpt; material remains implied) |
| Biological (physical) anthropology | Human origins, evolution, and variation |
| Linguistic anthropology | (Not detailed in excerpt; language implied) |
- Together, these subfields provide a multi-faceted picture of the human condition.
- Cultural anthropology is the largest subfield in the U.S., measured by the number of PhDs graduated each year.
🌐 How anthropology differs globally
Don't confuse: the U.S. four-field model with structures in other countries.
- United Kingdom and many European countries: "cultural anthropology" is called "social (or socio-cultural) anthropology"; archaeology, biological anthropology, and linguistic anthropology are often separate disciplines.
- Mexico: anthropology tends to focus on cultural and indigenous heritage of groups within the country rather than comparative research.
- Canada: some university departments mirror the British model by combining sociology and anthropology; others follow the U.S. four-field approach.
- The excerpt emphasizes that anthropology is "structured differently" depending on location.
🛠️ Applied anthropology
Applied anthropology: an area of specialization within or between the anthropological subfields that aims to solve specific practical problems.
- Works in collaboration with governmental, non-profit, and community organizations, as well as businesses and corporations.
- Bridges the subfields to address real-world issues.
🧑🤝🧑 Cultural anthropology in depth
🎯 What cultural anthropologists study
- Cultural anthropologists study "the similarities and differences among living societies and cultural groups."
- They examine every aspect of human life: art, religion, healing, natural disasters, even pet cemeteries.
- The excerpt states: "no aspect of human life is outside their purview."
- While initially intrigued by human diversity, anthropologists "come to realize that people around the world share much in common."
🏕️ The fieldwork method
Immersive fieldwork: living and working with the people one is studying.
- Cultural anthropologists "suspend their own sense of what is 'normal'" to understand other people's perspectives.
- The approach goes beyond description: anthropologists ask broader questions about humankind (e.g., Are human emotions universal or culturally specific? Does globalization erase cultural differences?).
- Why study different groups: the excerpt explains that "fresh insights are generated by an outsider trying to understand the insider point of view."
📚 Example: Jean Briggs and the Inuit
- Beginning in the 1960s, Jean Briggs (1929–2016) immersed herself in the life of Inuit people in Nunavut, central Canadian arctic.
- She arrived knowing only a few words of their language and braved sub-zero temperatures.
- In Never in Anger: Portrait of an Eskimo Family (1970), she argued that anger and strong negative emotions are not expressed among families living together in small igloos in harsh conditions.
- Key insight: Briggs challenged the view that anger is an innate emotion; her research showed that "all human emotions develop through culturally specific child-rearing practices that foster some emotions and not others."
🏙️ Example: Philippe Bourgois and urban poverty
- In the 1980s, American anthropologist Philippe Bourgois studied why extreme poverty persists in the U.S. despite overall wealth and high quality of life.
- He lived with Puerto Rican crack dealers in East Harlem, New York.
- He contextualized their experiences historically (Puerto Rican roots and migration) and in the present (social marginalization and institutional racism).
- Key insight: Rather than blaming individuals or society alone, Bourgois argued that "both individual choices and social structures can trap people in the overlapping worlds of drugs and poverty" (Bourgois 2003).
- Trend: Cultural anthropologists are "increasingly turning their gaze inward to observe their own societies or subgroups within them."
🦴 Biological anthropology
🐒 What biological anthropologists study
Biological anthropology: the study of human origins, evolution, and variation.
- Some biological anthropologists focus on our closest living relatives: monkeys and apes.
- They examine "the biological and behavioral similarities and differences between nonhuman primates and human primates (us!)."
🌿 Example: Jane Goodall and chimpanzees
- Jane Goodall devoted her life to studying wild chimpanzees (Goodall 1996).
- She began her research in Tanzania in the 1960s.
- What she challenged: At the time, it was assumed that monkeys and apes lacked the social and emotional traits that made humans exceptional.
- What she discovered: Like humans, chimpanzees also make tools, socialize their young, and have intense [excerpt cuts off here].
- Implication: Goodall's work challenged "widely held assumptions about the inherent differences between humans and apes."
🎓 Personal pathways into anthropology
💡 Why the authors share their stories
The excerpt includes two personal narratives from the textbook authors (Vanessa Martínez and Demetrios Brellas) to illustrate how people discover anthropology and why it matters.
🌟 Common themes in their stories
- Accidental discovery: Both authors took their first anthropology course somewhat by chance (Vanessa through a mentor, Demetri through an R.A.'s suggestion).
- Transformative impact: "A class really can change the trajectory of your life" (Vanessa); "This ended up being the very first college course I attended... I was in love" (Demetri).
- Engaging teaching: Both emphasize the importance of professors who brought topics to life through narrative and rich understanding.
- First-generation challenges: Demetri notes it "can be difficult for first generation students whose families lived experience does not include the pursuit of academics."
- Diverse backgrounds: Vanessa is Latin@/x/e from a working-class military family; Demetri comes from a Greek immigrant family and grew up in diverse Flushing, Queens.
- Values and motivation: Vanessa wants to "leave the world better than I found it" and center equity in teaching; Demetri was influenced by his parents' work ethic and the multicultural community he grew up in.
🔑 Self-reflection prompt
The excerpt ends with: "Self Reflection: What are you excited to learn about this semester in this class?"
Note: The excerpt includes introductory material (preface, author bios, learning objectives) and two personal narratives before the main content on anthropology begins. The substantive content on anthropology starts at section 1.2 and is incomplete (the section on biological anthropology cuts off mid-sentence).