Anthropology Today: Contemporary Trends in Social and Cultural Anthropology


SHALINA MEHTA (Panjab University, Chandigarh, India)

2010 •  Pages: 178 • Size: 180x240 •  ISBN 81-85264-53-8 • Binding: Hard •  Price: US $ 45/- Rs.1450/

(Anthropologist Special Issue No. 7)


 

Cyber space’s, technology, ecological changes and environmental crisis, proxy  wars and remote technologies controlling these wars, changing definitions of international borders along with plethora of treaties and trade regulations are redefining human societies.

 

Anthropology has moved out of its nascent insecurities and is accepted among sciences, humanities and social sciences as a political discipline that has the unique advantage of providing alternatives to many established notions of structured world communities.

 

Anthropological methodologies and its unflinching faith in field work centered empirical data generation have become content of many grounded theories in several other disciplines. There is universal appeal in anthropological imagination.

 

We are no longer a tribe of marginalized scholars whose primary interest is to document communities that are on the verge of extinction because of historical, cultural or natural processes of extermination. If we want to accept the collectivism of ‘tribe’ to represent our unique ability, then we must move forward and say that we as a tribe are not only engaged with ‘other tribes’ but with every community and social and cultural concern that processes of social and cultural transformations pose to our collective survival and sustainability of our ecosystems.

 

This volume is a beginner’s vision that reaches out to only few of these innumerable challenges 

 


CONTENTS


 

Editorial

iii-xi

 

List of Contributors

xiii

 

SECTION - 1

 

1. Cities Full of Symbols Peter J.M. Nas, Marlies de Groot and Michelle Schut

1-11

 

2. Tied to Each Other: Gazing on Networked Connectivity and Closure – Transnationalised Work and Workers •

Maheshvari Naidu

13-24

 

3. Understanding Urban Relocation and Rehabilitation Issues • Jyotsna Bapat

25-38

 

4. Crossing Boundaries: Constructing New spaces for African Refugee Students in Greater Western Sydney • Loshini Naidoo

39-45

 

5. Chinese Students in Paris • Jean Charles Lagree

47-57

 

SECTION - 2

 

6. Western Psychology and Traditional Methodologies. Some Rational Considerations • R.E.S. Tanner

59-65

 

7. Religious Belief and Perception of Illness in Esanland, Edo State of Nigeria • C.O. Aluede

67-74

 

8. Social Science Perspectives on Invasive Species • Priscilla Weeks 

75-86

 

SECTION – 3

 

9. How Milind Soman Made Me Gay Exploring Issues of Belonging and Citizenship amongst Gay South Asian Men in Diaspora • Harjant Gill

87-96

 

10. From Ethnopolitical Agitation to Terrorism: Interogating the Niger Delta Crisis in Nigeria •  Ilufoye Sarafa Ogundiya

97-107

 

SECTION – 4

 

11. Sociobiology: The Relevance of Biology in Social Inquiry • Krishan Sharma            

109-120

 

12. Symbolizing Human Life: Anthropological Explorations into Culture • Abhik Ghosh

121-133

 

13. Global Encounters and Challenges of Human Development in Nigeria Samuel Oluwole Ogundele

135-139

 

14. The Challenge of Anthropology as Humanitarian Science in the Eternal Search of Originality between the Cultural Difference and the Societal Otherness Nikos Gousgounis

141-157

 

Index

159-160

 


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