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Chapter 2 Ethics and Methods © 2008 McGraw-Hill Higher Education. All right reserved.
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Anthropological Approach Holistic perspective Cultural relativity Cross-cultural comparisons
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Terms for Chapter 2 Ethnocentric Adaptation Ethnography Ethnology Emic – insiders view Etic – outsiders view © 2008 McGraw-Hill Higher Education. All right reserved.
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Ethics and Anthropology American Anthropological Association Code of Ethics Informed consent Collaborative relationships Inclusion of host country colleagues in planning, funding requests, and dissemination of results “Giving something back”
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Western Science Methods Analysis Inductive Deductive
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Scientific Method Data Hypothesis Theory/Law Publish Methods Empirical observations Objective Subjective
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Methods in Cultural Anthropology Two brief categories of investigation Ethnographic Comparative Each one has two parts Present Recent past
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Ethnographic Methods Fieldwork Deals with the present time Primary method of collecting data Three main methods for fieldwork Participant Observation Interview Media
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Ethnohistory Deals with people in recent past Get data from the textual sources
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Comparative Methods Cross-cultural comparisons Controlled Historical Comparisons
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Cultural Anthropology and Sociology Share interest in social relations, organization, and behavior Sociology traditionally focused on large, industrialized Western nations Anthropology traditionally focused on small, nonliterate populations
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Ethnography: Anthropology’s Distinctive Strategy Firsthand, personal study of local cultural settings Extended period of time in a given society or community
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Ethnographic Techniques Observation and participant observation
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Ethnographic Techniques Conversation, interviewing, and interview schedules
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Ethnographic Techniques The genealogical method Key cultural consultants (key informants) Life histories
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Ethnographic Techniques Local beliefs and perceptions versus those of the ethnographer Emic (native-oriented) approach Etic (science-oriented) approach
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Types of Ethnography Problem-oriented Ethnography Most ethnographers investigate a specific problem Collection of data on range of variables Longitudinal Research Team Research
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Survey Research Becoming more popular Impersonal Limitations Race Gender
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Culture Shock What is culture shock? How could anthropologists get it?
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