Showing posts with label anthropology. Show all posts
Showing posts with label anthropology. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 19, 2023

Discuss how Futhwa had looked at traditional remedies in his work in South Africa.

Setho is the indigenous faith of the people of Afrika. Motho is an individual who practices Setho. Botho is the value system encompassing the lifestyle and norms of Batho(plural for Motho). Motho is a member of society, and this is an important element because in Setho individuality is not celebrated. Individuals are part of society and therefore must abide by the laws of society. Individuality is only acceptable within the confines of society. So long it does not compete with the interests of society. So Botho is a practical manifestation of how people live in Afrika and is an integral part of a peoples lifestyle.
Fezekile Futhwa’s book entitled “Setho- Afrikan Thought & Belief System”  is a description of this indigenous belief system using Basotho as the reference point, that is, the people living in the southern regions of the vast interior plateau between the eastern escarpment and the arid western regions in the south of the Limpopo river in South Africa.
 
A part of his work talks about the traditional remedies of the people in South Africa, as a focus area of indigenous knowledge system. He maintains that it is important to retain the knowledge and abilities of ordinary remedies for common ailments that are inherent in African communal life.
All members of society are taught, from a young age, what plants and herbs to use for these ailments such as flu, cold, headache, stomach ache, snake bites, fever, nose bleeding and the like. This is knowledge that ensures all in society are healthy as no one need consult a specialist for them (Futhwa 2011:96-97). Prevention is given a higher importance than the vocation of these specialists whose jobs is to worry about more serious ailments.
 
The knowledge of traditional medicine by medical professionals is paramount to the health profession and the maintenance of a healthy society. Traditional medical practitioners, called traditional doctors, are a unique form of profession whose qualification and trade works totally different from the normal accepted western professional life of vocational and academic knowledge. There are people who practice traditional medicine because it is hereditary, as something inherited from those who came before them. There are those who practice it because of their knowledge of traditional medicine. And then there those who are qualified traditional practitioners who have undergone proper training. It is estimated that over 70 percent of the South Afrikan population uses traditional medicine as their primary health plan. Clearly, traditional medicine plays a crucial role in the lives of South Afrikans.
 
The danger of not protecting this institution is the now prevalent practice of fake and unqualified traditional doctors. This does more harm, not just to the reputation of traditional doctors, but to the welfare of society since the majority of the people use traditional doctors.
 
Fezekile Futhwa maintains that it is important to retain the knowledge and abilities of ordinary remedies for common ailments that are inherent in African communal life. The thought behind his work is, the need to document people’s knowledge, as  there is every possibility that it would come to an end.

Reference:
IGNOU MA Anthropology Materials

Thursday, January 19, 2023

Why study 'Primitive Societies' ?

From: 'Social Anthropology' by E.E. Evans Pritchard

What are 'Primitive Societies' ?

We are sometimes criticized for giving so much of our time to the study of these primitive societies. It is suggested that inquiry into problems of our own society might be more useful. This may be so, but for various reasons, primitive societies have long held the attention of those interested in the study of social institutions. They attracted the notice of philosophers in the eighteenth century chiefly because they furnished examples of what was supposed to be a man living in a state of nature before the institution of civil government. They engaged the attention of anthropologists in the nineteenth century because it was believed that they provided important clues in the search for the origins of institutions. Later anthropologists were interested in them because it was held that they displayed institutions in their simplest forms and that it is a sound method to proceed from the examination of the more simple to the examination of the more complex, in which what has been learnt from the study of the more simple would be an aid. This last reason for interest in primitive societies gained in weight as the so-called functional anthropology today developed, for the more it is regarded as the task of social anthropology to study social institutions as interdependent parts of social systems, the more it is seen to be an advantage to be able to study those societies which are structurally so simple, and culturally so homogeneous, that they can be directly observed as wholes, before attempting to study complex civilized societies where this is not possible. Moreover, it is a matter of experience that it is easier to make observations among people with cultures unlike our own, the otherness in their way of life at once engaging attention and that it is more likely that interpretations will be objective. Another, and very cogent, reason for studying primitive societies at the present time is that they are rapidly being transformed and must be studied soon or never. These vanishing social systems are unique structural variations, a study of which aids us very considerably in understanding the nature of human society because in a comparative study of institutions, the number of societies studied is less significant than their range of variation. Quite apart from that consideration, the study of primitive societies has intrinsic value. They are interesting in themselves in that they provide descriptions of the way of life, the values, and the beliefs of people living without what we have come to regard as the minimum requirements of comfort and civilization.

We, therefore, feel it an obligation to make a systematic study of as many of these primitive societies as we can while there is still an opportunity to do so. There are a vast number of primitive societies and very few indeed have yet been studied intensively by anthropologists, for such studies take a long time and anthropologists are a very small body.

But though we give chief attention to primitive societies I must make it clear that we do not restrict our attention to them.

What are 'Primitive Societies' ?

From: 'Social Anthropology' by E.E. Evans Pritchard

The word 'primitive' in the sense in which it has become established in anthropological literature does not mean that the societies it qualifies are either earlier in time or inferior to other kinds of societies. As far as we know, primitive societies have just as long a history as our own, and while they are less developed than our society in some respects they are often more developed in others. This being so, the word was perhaps an unfortunate choice, but it has now been too widely accepted as a technical term to be avoided. It suffices to say at this stage that when anthropologists use it they do so in reference to those societies which are small in scale with regard to numbers, territory, and range of social contacts, and which have by comparison with more advanced societies a simple technology and economy and little specialization of social function. Some anthropologists would add further criteria, particularly the absence of literature, and hence of any systematic art, science, or theology. 

Why study 'Primitive Societies' ?

Photo by Bob Brewer on Unsplash

Thursday, January 05, 2023

Physical Anthropology

Physical anthropology, also known as biological anthropology, is the anthropological counterpart to the various biological sciences that deal with the study of human beings. Physical anthropology studies living human beings and also, non-human primates, along with extinct relatives and ancestors of humans, in different environmental stresses and conditions that exist, and existed, in the World. The two main aspects of study of this branch of anthropology are; human evolution and human variation. 

Human origin and evolution are one of the chief concerns of physical anthropologists. Through analysis of fossils and observation of living primates, they try to trace man's ancestry and understand his relationship with other living beings. Physical anthropology also tries to provide a comparative perspective on human uniqueness by placing Homo sapiens in the context of other living primates. The other major aim of physical anthropology is to understand human diversity and variation. being members of the same species, there is significant biological variation among the Homo sapiens. Not only visible traits but also biochemical factors such as blood type and susceptibility to diseases. Human beings have covered nearly all kinds of geographical zones of the World, hence the study of human adaptation is also an important part of physical anthropology. 

The initial concern of physical anthropology however was to describe the variation of a few features in human beings, mainly referring to measurements, computing indices and other statistics. Today, it not only describes the variation of hundreds of features but also encompasses the entire history and nature of biological change among human beings. This represents an enormous expansion in its scope. Because of the wide scope, physical anthropology can be divided into subbranches, each focusing on a different dimension of what it means to be human - from a biological perspective. Refer : Branches of - Physical/Biological Anthropology

Friday, December 23, 2022

Religion and Anthropology

The anthropological approach of studying human societies as integrated wholes consider religion as a part of culture. Anthropologists try to find out the relevance of religion in human societies, whether primitive or technologically advanced, and the significance of religion in human societies. Notable is the fact that there is no society known so far without any religious idea, it is a cultural universal. They made attempts to search for earlier forms of religion and religious thoughts and the courses of change therein. Some intellectuals thought that religion will have no place where science and technology flourish - but the reality is to the contrary. 

Anthropologists defined religion in different ways, but none of them adequately cover all aspects of religion practised by all human societies

Edward Burnett Tylor : "Belief in spiritual things"

Emile Durkheim : …"a unified system of beliefs and practices relative to sacred things, that is to say, things set apart and forbidden -- beliefs and practices which unite into one single moral community called a Church all those who adhere to them."

Clifford Geertz : "A religion is a system of symbols which acts to establish powerful, pervasive, and long-lasting moods in men by formulating conceptions of a general order of existence and clothing those conceptions with such an aura of factuality that the moods and motivations seem uniquely realistic."

for more - Various Definitions of Religion

Typical dictionary definition of religion : "belief in, or the worship of, God or Gods."

References: IGNOU Study Materials

Saturday, July 30, 2022

Theories of Social Anthropology/ Sociology

  1. Evolutionism/ Classical Evolutionism
      • Baron de Montesquieu (1689-1755)
      • Henry Summer Maine (1822-1888)
      • Johann Jacob Bachofen (1815-1887)
      • John F. McLennan (1827-1881)
      • James George Frazer (1854-1941)
      • Herbert Spencer (1820-1903) 
      • Lewis Henry Morgan (1818-1881)
      • Edward Burnett Tylor (1832-1917) unilineal evolutionism
  2. Diffusionism (late 19th C. - early 20th C.)
    • German Diffusionism
      • Friedrich Ratzel (1844-1904) criterion of form
      • Wilhelm Schmidt (1868-1954) 
      • Leo Frobenius (1873-1938) criterion of quantity
      • Frtiz Graebner (1877-1934) 
    • American diffusionism
      • Franz Boas (1858-1942) historical particularism
      • Clark Wissler (1870-1947) age-area hypothesis
      • Albert L. Kroeber (1876-1960) configurations of cultural growth
    • British Diffusionism
      • Grafton Elliot Smith (1871-1937)
      • W.H.R. Rivers (1864-1922)
      • William James Perry (1887-1949)
  3. Historical Particularism
      • Franz Boas (1858-1942)
  4. Neo - Evolutionism
      • V. Gordon Childe (1892-1957) universal evolutionism
      • Leslie White (1900-1975) 
      • Julian Steward (1902-1972) multilineal evolutionism 
      • Marshal Sahlins (1930-2021) 
  5. Functionalism
      • Emile Durkheim (1858-1917) positivism
      • Bronislaw Malinowski (1884-1942) functionalism
      • Alfred Radcliffe-Brown (1881-1955) structural functionalism
      • Talcott Parsons (1902-1979)
      • Robert K. Merton (1910-2003)
  6. Dynamic theories of structure
  7. Culture and Personality School
      • Sigmund Freud (1856-1939)
      • Ruth Benedict (1887-1948) configuration of culture
      • Margaret Mead (1901-1978) 
  8. Neo - Functionalism
      • Niklas Luhmann (1927-1998)
      • Jurgen Habermas (1929-)
      • Jeffrey Alexander (1947-)
      • Paul Colomy
  9. Marxism/ Marxist Anthropology
      • Karl Marx (1818-1883)
  10. Cultural Ecology
  11. Cultural materialism
  12. Structuralism
  13. Feminism/ Feminist Anthropology
  14. Post modernism
  15. Post colonialism
  16. Ethnoscience
  17. Symbolic Anthropology
*a brief list with the names of the main proponents, may not include all. 

source - History and Theory in Anthropology, Alan Barnard


Sunday, August 15, 2021

Branches of - Physical/Biological Anthropology


    • Human Growth and Development : This branch of physical anthropology concerns the process of growing to maturity (in biological terms: growth from a one-cell zygote to an adult human being).
        • Understanding -
          • different stages of growth
          • patterns of growth
          • effect of 
            • nutrition
            • environment
            • genetic factors (influencing growth)
        • Growth studies of populations reflect 
          • variation amongst them
          • growth rate of the nation
      Photo by Omar Lopez on Unsplash

      • Human Evolution : This branch, as the name suggests, revolves around the origin and evolution of Homo sapiens as a distinct species. The word “human” in the framework of human evolution speak of the genus Homo. In order to understand human evolution we study hominids also. 

      • Human Osteology : The study of human bones. Evidences concerning osteology are frequently applied in forensic science. It holds important information in arenas like health, disease, physique, genetics of early populations, identification of unknown remains, criminal investigations, war crimes, etc.
      • Human Ecology : A biological discipline that deals with the interactions between organisms and their environment. 
        • Environment = Physical Environment (temperature, water, wind, soil acidity, etc.) + Biological Environment
        • Human Adaptation ( physiologic, developmental, genetic) to environmental stresses and variation is part of human ecology.
        • Human beings are the most versatile species on Earth which can adapt to any environment. However, many other human ecological developments are probable in future. The growth of human population and how this growth is accommodated, the way they utilize these resources yet preserve the biodiversity is yet to be comprehended.

      • Human Diversity : Concerned with the study of human evolution and human biological variation. Human evolution involves extensive work on the discovery, analysis, and description of fossilized human remains. This mainly aids to identify the differences between humans and their nonhuman ancestors and how did present man emerge. To achieve this, it involves the comparative analysis of genetic codes. 
      Photo by Clay Banks on Unsplash

      • Human Variation : The term human variation is gaining popularity over its historical predecessor “race” in anthropology because of the exploitation of the term. It is suggested to use gene frequencies and biological traits of human populations by their geographic area. 
      • Human Genetics : Study of heredity, process by which characteristics are passed from parents to offspring. Involves the study of inheritance of gene (unit of hereditary in humans, common factor of most human traits). Provides information to the questions about :
        • human nature
        • understanding diseases and their effective treatment
        • understand genetics of human life
                 (Incorporates a variety of overlapping fields including: classical genetics, cytogenetics, molecular genetics, biochemical genetics, genomics, population genetics, developmental genetics, clinical genetics, and genetic counseling.)

      • Anthropological Genetics : Encompasses patterns of genetic similarity among different human populations to deduce demographic history. Genetic methods used to learn about human in the course of 
        • its deviation from apes
        • magnitude and how hominid population in geographical area originated
        • initial migrations of anatomically modern humans.
      • Population Genetics : Concerns with genetic structure of populations, i.e. 
        • frequency of alleles (alternate form of genes)
        • and its genotypes (genetic constitution)
      Photo by Joseph Chan on Unsplash

      • Genetic Anthropology : Deals with combining DNA data with available physical evidence and past histories of civilizations. This facilitates scientists to assemble through existing genetic information in elucidating how the modern day Homo sapiens evolved through the millennia.
      • Nutritional Anthropology : Describes how particular social and cultural factor place people at risk for nutritional disorder or identifying health problems related to nutrition. It is gaining importance mainly due to concern and consciousness of people towards health. Anthropologists have contributed to the specialized fields of nutrition at a more holistic perspective, based on the historical, direct observation, and documentary accounts. The significance of this field lies in assessing health status of any population.

      Photo by ja ma on Unsplash

      • Molecular Anthropology : Comparatively newer branch of physical anthropology which deals with the molecular analysis. 
        • It makes easier to understand the evolutionary links between ancient and modern human populations, as well as between contemporary species. 
        • This enables to determine the closeness or distance in relationship between populations or within populations.
        • Certain similarities in genetic makeup let molecular anthropologists determine whether or not different groups of people share a common geographical origin. (This paves way for anthropologists to trace patterns of migration and settlement, which gives an insight as to how contemporary populations have formed and progressed over time.)
        • Plays a very important role in establishing the evolutionary tree of humans and other primates, including closely related species like chimpanzees and gorillas
      • Forensic Anthropology : Forensic anthropology is the application of the science of physical anthropology and human osteology in a legal scenario; when in a criminal case, victim’s remains are unidentifiable or in the advanced stages of decomposition, forensic anthropology helps in identification of the individual. (The term “forensic” refers to the application of this subfield of science to a court of law.)
      • Physiological Anthropology : Human physiology is a scientific study of the
        • mechanical
        • physical
        • biochemical 
      functions of humans in good health, their organs, and the cells which constitute them.)

      • Dental Anthropology : Scientific study of people (living/extinct primitive relatives) using the evidence of teeth. 
      Practicing dentists, anatomists, radiologists, forensic scientists, biochemists and geneticists, archaeologists, paleontologists and zoologists apart from anthropologists are actively working in the field of Dental anthropology.
      • Primatology : Concerned with the study of Primates. Primates studied with the hope to gain more insight into human nature. Study of hominids includes all ape-like ancestors of man and the other great apes. Modern primatology boasts of newer and extremely diverse science ranging from - anatomical studies of primate ancestors and field studies of primates in their natural habitat, to - experiments in animal psychology and ape language.
      • Paleo primatology : Paleo primatologists take the assistance of fossil specimens by collecting, describing, and interpreting them them phylogenetically and functionally. As it is well understood that man is a primate evolved from non-human primates. The nonhuman primates are link to human physical history and status as mammals.
      • Paleoanthropology : is a branch of paleontology and anthropology which seeks to understand the early development of anatomically modern humans, a process known as hominization, through the reconstruction of evolutionary kinship lines within the family Hominidae, working from biological evidence (such as petrified skeletal remains, bone fragments, footprints) and cultural evidence (such as stone tools, artifacts, and settlement localities).
      • Anthropometry : : Anthropometry as the name suggests consists of Greek word “anthropos” which means man, and “metry” meaning measure. In literal sense : understanding of physical variation, measurement of humans. In physical anthropology : measuring of the human individual. Plays extensive role in industrial design, clothing design, defense equipment, ergonomics and architecture. 

      • Ergonomics : : Ergonomics is derived from two Greek words, “ergon” meaning work, and “nomoi” meaning natural laws, which means the science of work and a person’s relationship to that work. Fundamentally, the study of design equipment and devices that the human body, its movements, and how to carry about the work. (proper ergonomic design needed to avoid recurrent strain injuries)

      • Demography : Scientific study of uniqueness and movement relevant to the human population illustrated by -
          • size
          • growth rate
          • density
          • vital statistics
          • distribution of a specified population
      Demographer must know both

        • how to scientifically obtain information
        • how to interpret it relatively

      Demography is the basic statistics of human population which can be applied to any kind of human population which does not remain static. (i.e. changes over time/space) 


      Photo by Ryoji Iwata on Unsplash

      Reference: 

      Wednesday, June 23, 2021

      Holism in Anthropology

      Man is the only creature in the animal kingdom having two aspects: biological and cultural.
      • Anthropology explores both - the biological and cultural aspects of man.
      • In contrast to other disciplines like psychology, economics, zoology, and others, anthropology does not only study one aspect of human life but covers all dimensions of humanity. Only anthropology explores the entire panorama of human experiences.
      • As well as studying humanity as a whole, it also seeks to comprehend the differences within it. That is the diversity and variation among human beings - across time and space.
      Thus, Anthropology is the 'holistic science of man' --- a science of the sum of human existence.
      It is this multifaceted holistic approach that makes it unique and accounts for the wide scope of the field. 

      Anthropology has a 'four-field' approach that encompasses:
      1. Physical/Biological Anthropology
      2. Social/Cultural Anthropology
      3. Archaeological Anthropology
      4. Linguistic Anthropology
      Each of these unique subdisciplines contributes to the understanding of different aspects of human beings in a holistic way. 

      Examples: 
      • Capacity for learning a language is genetically programmed in our DNA (our biology); however, our environment determines which language/s we end up learning (our culture).
      • Anthropologists study Kinship not only as a cultural aspect. but also studies the variety of kinship patterns in different societies across the World.
      • Anthropology is equally interested in the lifeways of a Polynesian farmer, and a Japanese businessman.
      Anthropological study has the deepest possible time frame - starting from the earliest beginnings of human ancestors millions of years ago to the present. The broad time frame covered by anthropology is important because they believe any insights about contemporary human adaptations, either biological or cultural should be made with eye to past adaptations. 

      To conclude, anthropology does not limit itself to
      • any particular aspect of humanity
      • any particular group of people
      • any particular period in time
      It is this holistic approach through which anthropologists are able to gain an understanding of humanity.

      References: Collected from various sources. 

      Tuesday, June 22, 2021

      What is Anthropology?

      • Study of all humans in all times and places.
      • Anthropology studies human population throughout time and space - from the earliest humans to modern city dwellers - and attempts to incorporate knowledge of them into meaningful understanding of humanity. (Miller et al.)
      • Only one of the sciences of human beings, bringing together the common aims of many disciplines which describe human beings.
      • Science of human being, study of man/mankind (includes both men and women) in time and space.
      • Anthropology confronts basic questions of human existence and survival.
      • Discipline of infinite curiosity about human beings.
      • Anthropology is the myth of humankind, an explanation of our nature.
      • Anthropology is the research of human beings and human behaviour and communities in the present and past. The abstract term anthropology first appeared in the works of Magnus Hundt and Otto Casmann during the German Renaissance. It was derived from the combining forms of the Greek words ánthrōpos (human) and lógos(study), which began to be used in English by the early 18th century.6 With development, many disciplines are related to anthropology nowadays, such as sociocultural, biological, archaeological, and linguistic fields. (The Anthropology Reflection on Space and Place, BilingYang)
      • Anthropology is the study of humanity across time and space. Anthropologists study every possible realm of human experience, thought, activity, and organization. Human as we are, we can only engage in social and natural worlds through our human minds and human bodies. Even engagement with nonhuman realms such as astronomy and botany is conditioned by our human senses and human cognition and thus varies across different societies and different time periods. You may be thinking, If anthropology is the human aspect of absolutely everything, then does anthropology encompass the other social disciplines, such as political science, religious studies, and economics? This is not the case. Certainly, anthropologists are frequently multidisciplinary, meaning that while their research and teaching are focused within the discipline of anthropology, they also engage with other disciplines and work with researchers and teachers in other fields. But the way that scholars in the other social disciplines approach their subject matter is different from the way anthropologists approach those same subjects. The distinctive approach of anthropology relies on a central narrative, or story, about humanity as well as a set of scholarly commitments. This central story and these common commitments hold the discipline together, enabling anthropologists to combine insights from diverse fields into one complex portrait of what it means to be human. Anthropology is everything, but it’s not just anything. Anthropology is the study of humanity guided by a distinctive narrative and set of commitments. (Introduction to Anthropology, Open Stax)
      • "Anthropology is the most humanistic of the sciences and the most scientific of the humanities." -Alfred L. Kroeber.
      References: Collected