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1 - 50 of 197 search results for people alumni |u:www.anthroencyclopedia.com where 7 match all words and 190 match some words.
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  2. Literacy | Open Encyclopedia of Anthropology

    https://www.anthroencyclopedia.com/entry/literacy
    7 Jun 2024: Introduction. Literacy is such a central part of most people’s everyday lives that its ubiquity can be taken for granted. ... Review of Educational Research 54(4), 525-46. Faris, E. 1925. Pre-literate peoples.
  3. https://www.anthroencyclopedia.com/taxonomy/term/581/feed

    https://www.anthroencyclopedia.com/taxonomy/term/581/feed
    7 Jun 2024: Literacy is such a central part of most people’s everyday lives that its ubiquity can be taken for granted. ... Does the immediate access to vast amounts of information through Internet technologies change how people critically engage with texts (Wolf
  4. https://www.anthroencyclopedia.com/taxonomy/term/601/feed

    https://www.anthroencyclopedia.com/taxonomy/term/601/feed
    7 Jun 2024: of people that performed them) with certain buildings or particular parts of them. ... place—even if the people who perform them think or say they do.
  5. https://www.anthroencyclopedia.com/taxonomy/term/301/feed

    https://www.anthroencyclopedia.com/taxonomy/term/301/feed
    7 Jun 2024: Literacy is such a central part of most people’s everyday lives that its ubiquity can be taken for granted. ... Does the immediate access to vast amounts of information through Internet technologies change how people critically engage with texts (Wolf
  6. https://www.anthroencyclopedia.com/taxonomy/term/591/feed

    https://www.anthroencyclopedia.com/taxonomy/term/591/feed
    7 Jun 2024: and Andean peoples have invested images with meaning and value’ (Poole 1997, 7-8). ... People use photography to gain knowledge and mastery over their environments and the people around them.
  7. https://www.anthroencyclopedia.com/taxonomy/term/381/feed

    https://www.anthroencyclopedia.com/taxonomy/term/381/feed
    7 Jun 2024: and Andean peoples have invested images with meaning and value’ (Poole 1997, 7-8). ... People use photography to gain knowledge and mastery over their environments and the people around them.
  8. https://www.anthroencyclopedia.com/taxonomy/term/162/feed

    https://www.anthroencyclopedia.com/taxonomy/term/162/feed
    7 Jun 2024: and Apple Watch enable people to monitor a range of activities and functions associated with their bodies and minds. ... p>Participatory surveillance does, however, include a ‘vertical’ dimension, in the sense that people can monitor the authorities
  9. Results that match 1 of 2 words

  10. Landscape | Open Encyclopedia of Anthropology

    https://www.anthroencyclopedia.com/entry/landscape
    7 Jun 2024: or to do with ‘nature’ and land rather than with people and urbanised surroundings. ... Building, dwelling, living: how animals and people make themselves at home in the world.
  11. Climate change | Open Encyclopedia of Anthropology

    https://www.anthroencyclopedia.com/entry/climate-change
    7 Jun 2024: Others describe lessons that can be learnt from indigenous people and their engagement with the environment, such as Amazonian or Melanesian peoples who leave a minimal ecological footprint by not altering ... Thus it affects people in different ways,
  12. Tourism | Open Encyclopedia of Anthropology

    https://www.anthroencyclopedia.com/entry/tourism
    7 Jun 2024: Visited people and mediating specialists co-construct this experience with and for the visitors. ... They look at the visited people as objects, from a position of voyeuristic separation.
  13. Mind | Open Encyclopedia of Anthropology

    https://www.anthroencyclopedia.com/entry/mind
    7 Jun 2024: People have some sense of these distinctions, but their distinctness is not culturally meaningful. ... They also argued that people in different social worlds thought differently about mental causation.
  14. Feasting | Open Encyclopedia of Anthropology

    https://www.anthroencyclopedia.com/entry/feasting
    7 Jun 2024: What happens then is that food serves to oppose two groups of people (givers and receivers). ... How is it that people and invisible guests can eat the same food?
  15. Cannibalism | Open Encyclopedia of Anthropology

    https://www.anthroencyclopedia.com/entry/cannibalism
    7 Jun 2024: Distant people were often portrayed as cannibals: that is, as strange, animal-like creatures. ... epidemic of kuru, the neurological disease afflicting the Fore people (Bennet et al.
  16. Gifts | Open Encyclopedia of Anthropology

    https://www.anthroencyclopedia.com/entry/gifts
    7 Jun 2024: People in the Trobriands traditionally adhere to matrilineal descent and patrilocal post-marital residence. ... Here, people of low castes were generally not expected to return the dan gifts they receive from their superiors.
  17. Buddhism | Open Encyclopedia of Anthropology

    https://www.anthroencyclopedia.com/entry/buddhism
    7 Jun 2024: Abstract:. Buddhism has existed for around two and half millennia, and is practiced by over 500 million people in the world today. ... of people steeped in their worldly existence and participating through patronage and devotional practices to Buddhist
  18. Islam | Open Encyclopedia of Anthropology

    https://www.anthroencyclopedia.com/entry/islam
    7 Jun 2024: traditions of interpreting and living by the revelation; knowledge, cultural production, and social life related to the revelation in one way or another; and the identity of people and peoples associated ... divisions. Some people are very committed to
  19. Medical pluralism | Open Encyclopedia of Anthropology

    https://www.anthroencyclopedia.com/entry/medical-pluralism
    7 Jun 2024: which can result in the eclecticism of medical concepts and therapies as practiced in people’s everyday lives. ... influence people’s behaviour, compel action, communicate, instil fear or trust, and even heal.
  20. Postsocialism | Open Encyclopedia of Anthropology

    https://www.anthroencyclopedia.com/entry/postsocialism
    7 Jun 2024: that governed the lives of more than a quarter of a billion people. ... market, or particular groups), things (residential housing, furnishings, and aesthetic styles), and people (especially people’s embodied experience).
  21. Browse Entries | Open Encyclopedia of Anthropology

    https://www.anthroencyclopedia.com/article-browse
    7 Jun 2024: filter by subject. - Any -. Economics. Health. Kinship. Politics. Region. Religion. Theory. Sort by. sort by. title (asc). title (des). date (asc). date (des). Apply.. Browse Entries. filter by subject. - Any -. Economics. Health. Kinship. Politics.
  22. About | Open Encyclopedia of Anthropology

    https://www.anthroencyclopedia.com/about
    7 Jun 2024: filter by subject. - Any -. Economics. Health. Kinship. Politics. Region. Religion. Theory. Sort by. sort by. title (asc). title (des). date (asc). date (des). Apply.. About. The Open Encyclopedia of Anthropology (OEA) is an open teaching and
  23. Money | Open Encyclopedia of Anthropology

    https://www.anthroencyclopedia.com/entry/money
    7 Jun 2024: Just describing the meanings people assign, however, is not enough to understand what money is. ... Wolf, E.R. 2010. Europe and the people without history. Berkeley: University of California Press.
  24. Values | Open Encyclopedia of Anthropology

    https://www.anthroencyclopedia.com/entry/values
    7 Jun 2024: Why do people of a given social formation, if exposed to the same rituals, narratives, etc. ... value hierarchy becomes reproduced within individuals, rather than different values coming to exist as equals within people?
  25. Tax | Open Encyclopedia of Anthropology

    https://www.anthroencyclopedia.com/entry/tax
    7 Jun 2024: Why do people pay or evade taxes, and why does the state collect them? ... Fiscal systems also shape peoples’ perceptions regarding who contributes to society; where wealth is created; the place of the state in the lives of people; the place of people
  26. Animals | Open Encyclopedia of Anthropology

    https://www.anthroencyclopedia.com/entry/animals
    7 Jun 2024: Outside of Amazonia, the peoples of the circumpolar regions have also prompted anthropologists to think again about animism. ... Nomadic Peoples (N.S.) 10(2), 6-30. Best, S., A. J. Nocella II, R.
  27. Tribe | Open Encyclopedia of Anthropology

    https://www.anthroencyclopedia.com/entry/tribe
    7 Jun 2024: The Nuer: a description of the modes of livelihood and political institutions of a Niliotic people. ... describes the subject as ‘the study of what are called primitive or backward peoples’ (1952: 2).
  28. Waste | Open Encyclopedia of Anthropology

    https://www.anthroencyclopedia.com/entry/waste
    7 Jun 2024: Forth 2018). One was to locate pollution in the properties of substances and things as opposed to the relations between people and categories. ... Rather than proceeding from an analytical definition of indeterminacy, they start from ethnographic
  29. Gambling | Open Encyclopedia of Anthropology

    https://www.anthroencyclopedia.com/entry/gambling
    7 Jun 2024: up of individuals, and drawn attention away from the substantive manipulation of people by gambling machines. ... In Lilies of the field: marginal people who live for the moment (eds) S.
  30. Citizenship | Open Encyclopedia of Anthropology

    https://www.anthroencyclopedia.com/entry/citizenship
    7 Jun 2024: These projects work in the interface between people, policy, markets, and the state. ... These studies bring out the complex relationships between people and state bureaucracy, and between people and law.
  31. Disability | Open Encyclopedia of Anthropology

    https://www.anthroencyclopedia.com/entry/disability
    7 Jun 2024: other people than it is in contexts where personhood runs parallel with individualism. ... References . Ablon, J. 1984. Little people in America: the social dimension of dwarfism.
  32. Precarity | Open Encyclopedia of Anthropology

    https://www.anthroencyclopedia.com/entry/precarity
    7 Jun 2024: This existential perspective brings into view people’s feelings of vulnerability, displacement, and hopelessness. ... In recessionary Japan, people face growing hopelessness, isolation, and feelings of not belonging.
  33. Depression | Open Encyclopedia of Anthropology

    https://www.anthroencyclopedia.com/entry/depression
    7 Jun 2024: 2013). It reportedly affects more than 264 million people worldwide (Ritchie & Roser 2021). ... middle class whites’) and naively applying it to all other people (Kleinman 1988: xii).
  34. Submit an entry | Open Encyclopedia of Anthropology

    https://www.anthroencyclopedia.com/about/submit-entry
    7 Jun 2024: If you do provide pictures, please ensure that you hold written permission from the copyright owners for all people who may appear in them.
  35. Silence | Open Encyclopedia of Anthropology

    https://www.anthroencyclopedia.com/entry/silence
    7 Jun 2024: It enables or limits people’s ability to relate to each other in particular ways. ... Here, the silencing of people’s social and political voice can be sensed in stillness.
  36. Games | Open Encyclopedia of Anthropology

    https://www.anthroencyclopedia.com/entry/games
    7 Jun 2024: Although games are widespread and familiar to many of the world’s peoples, providing a compelling, overarching definition for what constitutes ‘a game’ has proved difficult. ... drives a car) in order to better distinguish between various ways in
  37. Dependence | Open Encyclopedia of Anthropology

    https://www.anthroencyclopedia.com/entry/dependence
    7 Jun 2024: by Suzanne Miers and Igor Kopytoff (1977) as accumulating ‘wealth in people’ (see also Vansina 1990, Guyer 1993). ... Chicago: University Press. Davis, J. 2015 [1977]. People of the Mediterranean: an essay in comparative social anthropology.
  38. Resistance | Open Encyclopedia of Anthropology

    https://www.anthroencyclopedia.com/entry/resistance
    7 Jun 2024: theories of how people act, and with what kind of consciousness or intentions, within political systems. ... New York: Columbia University Press. Wolf, E. 1982. Europe and the people without history.
  39. Water | Open Encyclopedia of Anthropology

    https://www.anthroencyclopedia.com/entry/water
    7 Jun 2024: also powerful influences on how people respond to a range of water issues. ... Oxford: University Press. Muru-Lanning, M. 2016. Tupuna Awa: people and politics of the Waikato River.
  40. Art | Open Encyclopedia of Anthropology

    https://www.anthroencyclopedia.com/entry/art
    7 Jun 2024: Western civilisation, and the task of anthropology was to study supposedly ‘primitive peoples’. ... to studying people of the same or superior social status than the anthropologists themselves.
  41. Autism | Open Encyclopedia of Anthropology

    https://www.anthroencyclopedia.com/entry/autism
    7 Jun 2024: This is because both sameness and difference imply a ‘norm’ against which people’s individual value is measured. ... Autism 18(7), 794-802. ——— & Lyte 2012. The normalisation agenda and the psycho-emotional disablement of autistic people.
  42. Ethnography | Open Encyclopedia of Anthropology

    https://www.anthroencyclopedia.com/entry/ethnography
    7 Jun 2024: However, increasingly anthropologists are eager to investigate places or people closer to their own experience. ... London: Dent. Dresch, P. 1992. Ethnography and general theory or people versus humankind.
  43. Monsters | Open Encyclopedia of Anthropology

    https://www.anthroencyclopedia.com/entry/monsters
    7 Jun 2024: For example, if people have a time before the beginning of history, monsters may or may not hail from there. ... The lives of local monsters and ‘their’ people are thus deeply, intricately, and intimately entangled.
  44. Animism | Open Encyclopedia of Anthropology

    https://www.anthroencyclopedia.com/entry/animism
    7 Jun 2024: Would disenchantment explain why Yukaghir view their stones, skis, or food products as being ‘not people’? ... Ojibwe consider that people are especially open to perceiving animistic beings in dreams, where they routinely encounter them.
  45. Mining | Open Encyclopedia of Anthropology

    https://www.anthroencyclopedia.com/entry/mining
    7 Jun 2024: Boom economies can crash, leaving people and regions longing for the days of increased but impermanent wealth (Ferguson 1999). ... It is also preferable to use them in dangerous situations which could endanger the lives of people.
  46. Ontological turn, the | Open Encyclopedia of Anthropology

    https://www.anthroencyclopedia.com/entry/ontological-turn
    7 Jun 2024: People see the world in different ways, but the world is still the world. ... However, there are other people involved in divination who do not think this is the case.
  47. Death | Open Encyclopedia of Anthropology

    https://www.anthroencyclopedia.com/entry/death
    7 Jun 2024: 2018). People the world over are, as Heraclitus put it, ‘living each other’s death’. ... Young people had turned away from their traditional cosmology and the beliefs that upheld it.
  48. Farming | Open Encyclopedia of Anthropology

    https://www.anthroencyclopedia.com/entry/farming
    7 Jun 2024: Anthropology has always engaged with agrarian people. Proponents of agricultural anthropology, i.e. ... Anthropologists thus often foreground the importance of meaning-making, identity, and the value of agriculture to people.
  49. Cargo cults | Open Encyclopedia of Anthropology

    https://www.anthroencyclopedia.com/entry/cargo-cults
    7 Jun 2024: cooperation. He proposed that people from different communities join to share garden and sea resources, working together to advance economically. ... People’s ongoing pursuit of status and power subverts the sociability they strive to achieve.
  50. Architecture | Open Encyclopedia of Anthropology

    https://www.anthroencyclopedia.com/entry/architecture
    7 Jun 2024: of people that performed them) with certain buildings or particular parts of them. ... place—even if the people who perform them think or say they do.
  51. Magic | Open Encyclopedia of Anthropology

    https://www.anthroencyclopedia.com/entry/magic
    7 Jun 2024: One may wonder: perhaps such people, despite their discernment, were ignorant of modern science – is magic ‘primitive’ or ‘barbarous’, then? ... in and through practice – in other words, in figuring out what people do exactly, when they do
  52. Care | Open Encyclopedia of Anthropology

    https://www.anthroencyclopedia.com/entry/care
    7 Jun 2024: such people initially use to make their claim to dependence as, instead, a wilful refusal of self-care (Lester 2019). ... Ithaca: Cornell University Press. Bakke, O.M. 2005. When children became people: the birth of childhood in early Christianity.

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