Four pictues of people from around the world

CULTURAL  ANTHROPOLOGY  TUTORIALS


 
1.    What is Anthropology?  9. Process of Socialization
2.    Human Culture 10. Ethnicity and Race
3.    Language and Culture 11. Political Organization
4.    Patterns of Subsistence 12. Social Control
5.    Economic Systems 13. Anthropology of Religion
6.    Social Organization 14. Medical Anthropology
7.    Kinship 15. Culture Change
8.    Sex and Marriage
    16. Glossary of Terms
 


Created and Maintained by Dr. Dennis O'Neil
Behavioral Sciences Department, Palomar College, San Marcos, California

This page was last updated on October 24, 2010.
Copyright © 1997-2010 by Dennis O'Neil. All rights reserved.
Photos on this page reproduced with permission from Corel Corporation, Ottawa, Canada

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Graduate Program in Socio-Cultural Anthropology

Cultural anthropologists in the department share a belief that study and research must be firmly grounded in rigorous training in general social and cultural theory, both in contemporary writings and in the classics of anthropology and sociology. The faculty also believes that basic ethnography remains the cornerstone on which all cultural anthropology rests and are concerned with the representation of anthropological knowledge in writing and film. There is a commitment to an understanding of complex societies that is informed by a comparative perspective and knowledge of smaller-scale settings. Recent field research by faculty and students has been conducted in East and West Africa, North and South America (including research among Native Americans), Australia, the Caribbean, Eastern and Western Europe, Melanesia, the Middle East, Polynesia, South Asia, and the former Soviet Union. Faculty interests converge around gender relations, emotion, religion and belief systems, expressive culture and performance, the anthropology of history, colonialism and post-colonial nationalism, the cultural context of legal and political institutions, transnational processes, and urban life. Much faculty research focuses on the mediation of identities though popular and public cultural forms - such as art, television, indigenous media, urban space, regional cultures, and ideologies of language use - in a variety of changing social contexts.

Socio-Cultural Anthropology Mission Statement

Socio-cultural anthropology, which we understand to include linguistic anthropology, is concerned with the problem of difference and similarity within and between human populations. The discipline arose concomitantly with the expansion of European colonial empires, and its practices and theories have been questioned and reformulated along with processes of decolonization. Such issues have re-emerged as transnational processes have challenged the centrality of the nation-state to theorizations about culture and power. New challenges have emerged as public debates about multiculturalism, and the increasing use of the culture concept outside of the academy and among peoples studied by anthropology. These are not "business-as-usual" times in the academy, in anthropology, or in the world, if ever there were such times.

Questions about cultural processes and theorizing about "human nature" escape the boundaries of anthropology as a discipline. The major paradigms framing cultural difference and human universals are profoundly contested; migrations, political collapses and social reorganizations transform the context in which the production of cultural meanings and theories of culture have been embedded and reproduced. For many of us, this is a moment in which it is necessary to take up the sort of broad challenges with which our disciplinary predecessors struggled -- to redefine the field of inquiry and research in relation to debates that have enormous significance in our own lives and those of the people we study.

Like our colleagues elsewhere, we are working to place contemporary social anthropological practice in the cross-currents of a burgeoning interest in culture and cultural differences. This is part of the changing historical conditions of the analysis of cultural practice in anthropology, shaped by a shifting of boundaries between those who study and those who are the objects of study, as well as the reorganization of disciplines and their location in the world. Our collective enterprise is to help make an anthropology that grapples with the changing situations of contemporary life. The worlds in which we work, both inside the academic institution and outside, demand more than ever a rethinking of basic concepts and methods and formulation of research projects to engage a range of changing ethnographic objects. At NYU there has been extraordinary cooperation in engaging with these issues, reformulating anthropological traditions of study in order to conceive new problems and comprehend changing circumstances in the world outside the academy.

However much anthropology might need to be transformed in the light of criticism, what holds us together is a firm grounding in the traditions and methods of the field focusing on two key disciplinary commitments. The first is the commitment to "fieldwork" -- a coeval presence with social actors -- as a way of challenging one's embeddedness in systems of theoretical knowledge. We recognize the need to retheorize this kind of practice, but continue to regard it as the foundation of anthropological knowledge. The second commitment is to the study of cultural processes and practices through which human action is individually and collectively mediated -- that is, to the study of people doing things, of action and practices, rather than the study of culture as an object. Our interest is in how actors (or agents) constitute themselves and organize social life with particular attention to material culture, performance, and expressive media.

Some of us began our research careers with ethnography in small-scale societies, but we all recognize the difficulty of any anthropological project now that would disregard the way such social worlds are embedded in economic, political, and cultural processes of a larger order. The shared project of the socio-cultural faculty concerns the problems of how to develop an anthropological approach to such complex socio-cultural phenomena. There has clearly been a movement among students and faculty to pursue research at the level of what are commonly known as "complex societies," and especially an interest in the development of anthropological approaches to the study of ‘Western’ society (France, Spain, the U.S.), but we are deeply committed to the view that such study should be informed by a comparative perspective and the knowledge of small-scale societies developed within anthropology. The faculty believes that basic ethnography remains the cornerstone on which all cultural anthropology rests; that study and research must be firmly grounded in rigorous training in general social and cultural theory, both in contemporary writings and in the classics of anthropology and sociology; and that we need to examine what is at stake in representations of anthropological knowledge in writing and media.

A distinctive emphasis has emerged in this department around the study of "cultural mediations": religion, ritual, language, art, poetry, indigenous and mass media, music, and cultural spectacles -- as they mediate social relations at many levels of social action. Faculty interests fall into three interrelated configurations. The first concerns the study of a range of signifying practices--language, emotion and personhood, art and material culture, media, museums, music and popular culture, religion and ritual, and history and "social memory." These interests intersect with a second configuration around urban space, nationalism, historical processes, cultural policy, language ideology, social movements, and transnational processes such as migration, the circulation and consumption of cultural capital, and tourism. Faculty and student research that has focused on the mediation of national, diasporic, and indigenous identities through popular and public cultural forms in a variety of changing social contexts has brought many of us to participate in both of these configurations. The development of the Program in Culture and Media -- with its rigorous training in theory, production, and ethnography of media -- has been a particularly vital component of this configuration, as a site for rethinking the relationships among different kinds of cultural production.

A third configuration is now being developed by several faculty in Medical Anthropology and Science Studies. ongoing research projects are examining the intersection of reproductive technologies and the medicalization of social practices; the construction of genetic knowledge in labs, clinics, and genetic support groups; the social construction of diagnoses of emotion-related disorders and their relationship to the production of psychotropic drugs; ways in which social formations come to grips with the revolution in genetics and the effects of the production and dissemination of new scientific knowledge; and the remaking of the public sphere -- from policy to social movements -- as new media, information technologies and neo-liberal economies transform these arenas. Crosscutting all of these configurations is a record of strength and continuing work in linguistic anthropology, feminist anthropology and gender and sexuality studies.

Departmental emphases draw on the great benefits that come from being at a large, first-rate urban university. We have important cross-disciplinary formations in area studies (the Institute of French Studies, The Center for Caribbean and Latin American Studies, the Kevorkian Center and Middle East Studies, Africana Studies, Asian/Pacific American Studies, American Studies, and East Asian Studies) as well as in other areas including our collaborative arrangements with Cinema Studies and the Film School; Museum Studies; Linguistics; and the Institute for the History of the Production of Knowledge--giving students access to a broad range of expertise.

Faculty


                
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Thomas A Abercrombie
Research/Interest: Cultural history/historical anthropology; memory and patrimonial regimes; colonialism and postcolonial situations; nationalism; ethnohistory of Andean societies, gender and sexuality in the Hispanic world; food and place; Andes, Spain.

                
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Thomas O. Beidelman
Research/Interest: Social anthropology, Africa, religion and symbolism, witchcraft and magic, history of colonialism, Christian missionaries, African literature, urban neighborhood and landscape preservation movements, history of British and European anthropology and sociology

                
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Arlene Davila
Research/Interest: race and ethnicity; nationalism; media studies; political economy, globalization; the politics of museum and visual representation; urban studies; consumption; Latinos in the U.S.

                
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Tejaswini Ganti
Research/Interest: anthropology of media, visual anthropology/visual culture, cultural policy, nationalism, postcolonial theory, capitalism, neoliberalism, globalization, Indian cinema, South Asia

                
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Haidy Geismar
Research/Interest: Visual anthropology, Pacific anthropology, intellectual, cultural and indigenous property rights, economic anthropology, cross-cultural theories of value and valuation, materiality, contemporary indigenous art, museum theory and criticism.

                
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Faye Ginsburg
Research/Interest: Social anthropology; ethnographic film; indigenous media; social movements in the United States; gender and reproduction.

                
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Bruce Grant
Research/Interest: Former Soviet Union, Siberia, the Caucasus; cultural history and politics; religion.

                
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Aisha Khan
Research/Interest: Race and ethnicity; social stratification; theory and method in diaspora studies; religion; the Caribbean and Latin America.

                
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Emily Martin
Research/Interest: Anthropology of science and medicine, gender, cultures of the mind, emotion and rationality, history of psychiatry and psychology, US culture and society.

                
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Sally E. Merry
Research/Interest: Anthropology of law; human rights; colonialism; transnationalism; gender and race; US, Pacific and Asia/Pacific region.

                
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Fred R. Myers
Research/Interest: Research with Aboriginal people in Australia, concentrating on Western Desert people. He is interested in exchange theory and material culture, the intercultural production and circulation of culture, in contemporary art worlds, in identity and personhood, and in how these are related to theories of value and practices of signification.

                
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Rayna Rapp
Research/Interest: Gender, reproduction, health and culture, science and technology, United States and Europe.

                
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Susan C. Rogers
Research/Interest: Sociocultural anthropology; French society and culture; rural development; tourism; Europeanist ethnography and history.

                
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Renato I. Rosaldo
Research/Interest: Sociocultural anthropology history, society; island Southeast Asia, US Latinos and Latin America.

                
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Bambi B. Schieffelin
Research/Interest: Linguistic anthropology, language ideology, literacy, language socialization, childhood, missionization, Papua New Guinea, Caribbean.

                
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Patricia Spyer
Research/Interest: Global Distinguished Professor of Anthropology

                
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Noelle M.  Stout
Research/Interest: Ethnographic film and visual studies; gender and sexuality; feminist anthropology; nationalism; late-socialist Cuba; Cherokee cultural politics

                
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Constance R. Sutton
Research/Interest: Caribbean and West Africa ethnography, transnational migrations/diasporic processes, gender, state hierarchies, and globalization, new international social movements (especially the international women's movement), and post-colonial changes in historical consciousness and identities.

                
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Angela Zito
Research/Interest: Cultural history/historical anthropology; critical theories of religion; religions of China; religion and media; history and anthropology of embodiment; performance and subjectivity.
North American Indian medicine men and shamans have played a large role in the the older literature on North America. The nineteenth century saw the first anthropology description of American medicine men and shamans.

By definitions, all shamans would be medicine man but to all medicine men would be shamans.

Shamanism means traditions of prehistoric origin that are characteristic of Mongoloid peoples, including the American Indians.

They believed and acknowledge one supreme, all powerful, and intelligent Being, or Giver of Life, who create and governs all things.

The Shaman functionary in the chief place in all religious and ceremonial activities, thus making shamanism synonymous with religion.

It is the shaman rather than the priest who is called upon to treat the sick, to foretell the future.

Medicine power is often attributed to a fetish or charm adopted to typify a tutelary demon, or mystery guardian and the superior performance of one “juggler” over another is often attributed to the fact his medicine is the stronger.

Medicine is also associated with magic numbers. The usual sacred number among Indian is four, signifying the cardinal directions, but sometimes six, adding the up and down directions.

The Medicine bundle was perhaps the most important. In the thirties the medicine bundle cult still survive among the Potawatomis along with the more recent religion or drum dance, and peyote religion, as one of the three curing cults still extant.

The medicine bundle was usually made of an animal skin as deer tails, dried fingers, and often the maw stone of a buffalo.

Characteristically, the shaman is a healer, a psychopomp (who guides the souls of the dead to their home in the afterlife), and more generally a mediator between her or his community and the world of spirits (most often animal sprits and the spirits of the forces of nature).
American Indian Shaman

Tuesday, February 8, 2011

History of Cooking

History of Cooking
Cooking is the oldest of the arts. It is of all arts that which has most signally advanced the cause of civilization; for the need of cooking taught is the application of fire and by means of fire man became lord over nature.

One theory is that an out of control fire burned down a hut and accidently cooked some pigs. People wandered in, tried the cooked meat and liked it.

Another theory is that a forest fire first roasted meat; still others think that cooking was a more deliberate, controlled act by humans. In any case, now there were more options than raw bar and tartare.

It was cooking but how about cuisine? Cuisine can be defined a self conscious tradition of cooking and eating, with a set of attitude about food and its place in the life of man.

So cuisine requires not just a style of cooking but an awareness about how the food is prepared and consumed.

It must also a wide variety of ingredients, more than are locally available and cooks and diners willing to experiments which means they are not constricted by tradition.

In modern times, humans are the only animals that cook food, but archeological evidence indicates that this was not always the case.

In the past, other, now instinct species that were related to modern Homo sapiens, such as Neanderthals, also cooked food.

Indeed, cooking almost certainly existed 2500,000 years ago, and it may have existed 1.5 millions years ago, well before the emergence of Homo sapiens as a species.

Roasting over an open fire probably the first cooking method. Pit roasting – putting food in a pit with burning embers and covering it - might have come next.

Then spit roasting, when hunters came home with the animal already on a spear and decided to cook it by hanging it over the fire and turning it.

With sharp tools, meat could be cut into smaller pieces to make it cook faster. Food could be boiled large mollusk or turtle shells where they were available, or even in animal skins, but pots were not invented until around 10,000 BC and there were no sturdy clay boiling pits until about 5000 BC.

The invention of pottery cookware that was both waterproof and heatproof, allowing food to be easily boiled and stewed. Food was eventually enclosed in ovens; the earliest ovens discovered so far have been found in Egypt and date to about 3000 BC.

The first references to frying date from about 600 BC.
History of Cooking

Saturday, January 29, 2011

The Meaning of Anthropology

The Meaning of Anthropology
Anthropology is a science of humanity and its society. It is a scientific study of humanity, the similarities and diversity of cultures, and attempts to present an integrated picture of humankind.

Anthropology studies the biological, social and cultural development of humankind and seeks answers to why people are different and how they are similar. It has subdivisions linked by unifying themes. one can glean the vastness of the subject matter of anthropology by looking into its serious fields such as the following:

1. Biological or physical anthropology
2. Archeology
3. Cultural anthropology
4. Linguistics
5. Applied Anthropology

Biological or physical anthropology
This studies the evolution of man and biological variations or diversity within the species. Biological anthropologists are concerned with how biological changes occur and how all these are related to the natural and social environments of the subjects.

The study the biological processes of humans and their primate relatives in their natural and social environments.

A knowledge of human variation is important in understanding human adaptation.

Archeology
Archeology studies and reconstructs events of the past since the beginning of the culture through such cultural remains as tools, buildings and pot shards (broken pieces of pottery.)

The focus is on the discovery of people and looking into how cultures change occurs. Archeologists do this by excavating sites.
The Meaning of Anthropology




 
 
"중국과 북방선교지 소식"의 일부 자료들 중에는
친구하기 블로그와 선교사님, 함께쓰기 통하기 분들과   
공유할 수 있도록 되어 있습니다.
방문자님들은 양해 바랍니다.
 
이곳란은 문화인류학(Cultural Anthropology) 자료수집을 위한 공간입니다.
동역하는 선교사님들과 친구하기 회원님들을 위해서만 일부공개합니다.
 
 
너의 하나님 여호와가 너의 가운데 계시니
그는 구원을 베푸실 전능자 전능자시라
그가 너로 인하여 기쁨을 이기지 못하시며
너를 잠잠히 사랑 하시며 즐거이 부르며
기뻐 기뻐 하시리라..
(스가랴 3:17)

















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"중국과 북방선교지 소식 방문을 환영합니다!"

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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인류학 [人類學, anthropology]

 

인류와 그 문화의 기원·특질을 연구하는 학문.
보통 형질인류학과 문화인류학으로 분류된다. 다양한 민족들에 관한 자연 그대로의 설명과 해석이 인류학의 특징이지만 그 주제나 연구방법이 고유한 것은 아니다. 인류학은 일반적으로 알려져 있듯이 역사와는 다르다. 이는 인류학이 민족·제도·종교 또는 관습에 대한 역사적인 연구를 배제하기 때문이 아니라 문서자료를 통한 설명보다 인간, 인간의 활동, 인간의 생산물에 대해 가능한 한 직접 관찰을 한다는 점에서 그러하다. 또한 이런 모든 연구 결과를 인간에 관한 총체적인 기록의 일부로 볼 뿐 아니라, 인류의 생물학적·문화적인 발전과 관련된 복합적인 과정을 더 깊이 이해하는 데 기여하는 것으로 본다는 점에서 그러하다. 마찬가지로 인간의 신체·정신의 다양성과 집단적인 차이를 연구한다는 측면에서 인류학의 접근방법은 생리학 또는 심리학과도 다르다.

 

인류학자들은 인류의 전역사에서 시간과 공간의 측면에서 특정 집단과 활동이 갖는 고유한 특성을 연구하고 해석하려 한다. 현대 인류학은 대륙발견시대에 시작되었다(→ 탐험의 역사). 이 시기에 기술적으로 발전해 있던 유럽 문화는 다양한 토착문화와 폭넓게 접촉하게 되었는데, 유럽인들은 이 문화들을 일괄적으로 '야만' 또는 '원시' 문화로 규정했다. 19세기 중반에 학문에 대한 종교적인 통제가 약화됨에 따라 인간의 기원, 인종 분류, 비교해부학, 언어와 같은 주제에 새로운 관심이 생기게 되었다.

 

1859년 찰스 다윈〈종의 기원 The Origin of Species〉 출판을 통해 공식적으로 진화 개념을 언급함에 따라 인류발전과 시간의 흐름에 따른 사회·문화 발전에 대한 연구가 크게 활성화되었다. 19세기 후반에 단선적인 역사개념이 인류학의 주류를 이루었는데, 이에 따르면 모든 인간집단은 문화적인 진화의 특정 단계들, 즉 '야만' 또는 '미개' 상태를 거쳐 '문명인'(예를 들면 서구 유럽인) 단계로 발전하게 된다(→ 문화적 진화). 같은 시기에 카를 마르크스와 그 영향을 받은 사상가들은 그와는 다른 사회진화론을 주장했다. 마르크스의 이론에 따르면 한 사회의 경제적인 생산양식이 일련의 지배원리를 결정한다. 이 지배원리는 생산양식이 변한 후에도 한동안 지체되는 것이 특징이며, 그결과 지배원리와 생산양식 사이에 갈등이 일어남으로써 새로운 사회질서가 생긴다. 이러한 통일된 이론들은 여행가·상인·선교사 들이 수집한 지식을 바탕으로 씌어진 제임스 프레이저 경의 〈황금 가지 The Golden Bough〉(1890) 같은 대중적인 저서와 달리 몇 년 안 되어 학문적으로 상당한 발전을 이루었다.
20세기가 시작되면서 서구 유럽과 북아메리카 초기 인류학자들이 갖고 있던 강한 문화적인 편견이 점점 사라지고, 사회와 문화의 폭넓은 다양성에 대한 다원론적이고 상대주의적인 견해가 우세하게 되었다(→ 문화상대주의). 문화적 상대주의에 바탕을 둔 이 입장은 모든 문화를 물리적인 환경, 문화적인 접촉, 그밖의 다른 여러 가지 요소들의 독특한 산물로 파악했다. 이러한 견해에 뒤이어 경험적인 자료, 현지조사, 일정한 문화적·자연적 환경 안에서 일어나는 인간의 행동에 관한 구체적인 증거를 강조하는 경향이 생겼다(→ 민족지). 이러한 접근방법을 행한 가장 주요한 본보기가 된 사람은 문화사학파의 시조로 알려진 독일 태생 미국의 인류학자 프란츠 보아스였다. 보아스와 루스 베니딕트, 마거릿 미드, 에드워드 서피어 등 그의 제자들은 20세기 전반을 통해 미국 인류학의 주류를 형성했다.

 

문화사학파는 문화적인 자료에 기능주의적인 방법으로 접근하여 한 문화에 속한 여러 다양한 양식·특징·관습을 조화시켜 표현하려 했다. 한편 프랑스의 경우 파리대학교의 민족학연구소 설립자인 마르셀 모스는 인간사회를 자기조절 할 뿐 아니라, 문화통합체계를 보존하기 위해 여러 가지 방법으로 변화하는 환경에 적응하는 총체적인 체계로 보는 입장에서 연구를 진행시켰다.
모스는 프랑스의 클로드 레비 스트로스, 영국의 브로니슬라프 말리노프스키와 A.R. 래드클리프 브라운과 같이 이질적인 접근방법을 꾀한 이들에게 상당한 영향을 미쳤다. 말리노프스키는 계속 엄격한 기능주의적인 접근방법을 추구했으며, 래드클리프 브라운과 레비 스트로스는 구조주의 원리를 발전시켰다. 두 학파는 사회사를 사회이론의 토대로 보지 않는 점을 제외하고는 별개의 방향으로 발전했다.

 

기능주의자들의 주장에 따르면 사회현상을 분석하는 단 하나의 타당한 방법은 그 현상이 사회에서 수행하는 기능을 규정하는 것이었다. 반면 구조주의자들은 사회구성원들이 신화와 상징을 통해서만 인식하는 폭넓은 현상의 구조적 성격 및 대상을 알아내려 했다.
1930년대에 루스 베니딕트가 행한 미국 남서부 인디언에 관한 연구를 통해 문화심리학이라는 문화인류학의 소(小)분야가 생겨났다. 베니딕트의 주장에 따르면 문화는 천천히 발전하면서 구성원들에게 독특한 '심리적인 성향'을 갖게 하는데, 구성원들은 환경적인 요소에 상관없이 문화를 통해 정해진 방향을 따라 현실을 해석하게 된다는 것이다. 이른바 전통사회는 물론, 현대사회의 문화적인 '통합' 또는 가치체계에서 그 예를 볼 수 있는 것처럼 문화와 인성(人性)의 상호관계는 폭넓은 연구주제로서 자리잡게 되었다.

 


문화인류학이 독자적으로 하나의 성숙한 사회과학 분과로 발전하는 동안 형질인류학은 자연현상에서 차지하는 인간의 위치를 규정하고, 인간과 다른 영장류 사이의 차이를 알아내고, 다양한 인종의 신체적인 차이를 분류하는 일에 계속 관심을 두었다. 19세기 후반 다윈의 진화론이 일반적으로 널리 받아들여진 가운데, 형질인류학자들은 고대인류를 추적하는 데 고고학자들과 고생물학자들의 발굴 성과를 이용하기 시작했다.
20세기가 시작되면서 확실한 증거를 바탕으로 인종이 분류되었으며, 고등 영장류 사이의 차이점에 관한 개괄이 이루어졌다. 1900년 그레고어 멘델의 일반유전법칙이 재발견되고, ABO식 혈액형계가 처음 발견되면서 종(種)의 진화론적인 변화 개념은 새로운 의미를 갖게 되었다. 20세기 후반 형질인류학자들은 두개골 화석에서 나타난 증거를 바탕으로 약 50만 년 동안의 인류진화과정을 도표로 만들 수 있게 되었다(→ 인류유전학).

 


현대인류학의 관심과 기법은 물리학·생물학·행동과학·사회과학 등 폭넓은 전문분야에 걸쳐 있다. 예를 들면 원자물리학 덕분에 고고학적인 발굴물의 상대적인 연대를 측정하기 위한, 방사성 탄소를 이용한 연대측정법과 같은 기술이 발전했다. 여러 민족의 지리적인 기원을 알아내기 위한 연구에는 인간의 유전을 연구하는 생물학자들이 개발한 방법이 이용되고 있다. 유럽 집시들이 원래 인도 태생이었다는 추측을 입증할 수 있었던 것은 유전학 기술을 응용해 혈액형을 조사함으로써 밝혀진 사실이다. 여러 민족들의 가족관계, 근친상간 금기와 같은 종교적·법적인 관습을 이해하는 데에는 정신분석이론에 주로 바탕을 둔 심리학의 원칙이 채택되고 있다.

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