Why humans have cultures : explaining anthropology and social diversity
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Why humans have cultures : explaining anthropology and social diversity
(OPUS)
Oxford University Press, 1992
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Note
"An OPUS book"--Half-title
Includes bibliographical references (p. [205]-209) and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
This book is the result of two projects. The first was to provide an introduction to anthropology for the curious, showing that anthropology is an activity which helps us to understand and deal with human and cultural social diversity. The second was an invitation to colleagues in anthropology and cognate disciplines, and it began from the question: "Why do humans have such diverse cultures and ways of life?". This book hopes to combine the readerships of those on the threshold of anthropology and those at its centre.
Table of Contents
- The question - one strand, a second strand, a third strand, and all strands together
- the great arc - the great arc, sea shells, between, Europe and the people without history, metamorphic life, the question again
- beginning to make history - Darwinian demands, the basic sketch, social and technical intelligence, the selective advantage of sociality, an evolutionary ratchet, the invention of history, three tales
- the anatomy of sociality - intersubjectivity, mind-reading, politeness, pedagogy and aesthetic standards, creativity and repetition with constant variation, speech and stories, putting it back together
- reading minds and reading life - research programmes, narrative thought, Oedipus Rex, making events, recapitulation
- the bull and the saint - the philosopher and the story-teller, a short, sharp story, ambiguities, Siddhasagar again, a disagreement, paradigmatic thought again, imagery.
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