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The Anthropologist is an English-language peer-reviewed academic journal that concentrates on the anthropology of India. It was first published in August 1954 by the Anthropology department of the University of Delhi, ceased publication in the early 1980s and was then revived in 1999 by Kamla-Raj Enterprises.
Sarat Chandra Roy (4 November 1871 – 30 April 1942 [1]) was an Indian scholar of anthropology. [2] He is sometimes regarded as the 'father of Indian ethnography ', the 'first Indian ethnographer', and as the 'first Indian anthropologist'.
Indian Anthropological Association (IAA) is the representative body of the professional anthropologists in India. Established in 1969, its headquarters are situated within the Department of Anthropology, University of Delhi and associated with World Council of Anthropological Associations (WCAA).
It is currently published by Serials Publications Pvt. Ltd. India. Man in India, a quarterly peer-reviewed journal and published anthropological articles that covers the South Asian studies. This is a pioneer International journal in anthropology. Since 1921 it has been published anthropological papers concern with South Asian society and culture.
Indera Paul Singh (20 January 1928 – 27 September 2016) was an Indian anthropologist who had served at prominent positions in several Indian and international anthropological organizations. He was the first recipient of a doctorate degree in anthropology from the University of Delhi and also served as a member of its executive and academic ...
Surajit Sinha's original contribution in Indian anthropology could be found in his articles on 'Tribe-Caste and Tribe-Peasant Continua in Central India'(1965), 'State formation and Rajput myth in Tribal Central India'(1962) and 'Bhumij-Kshatriya social movement in south Manbhum(1959) in which he viewed tribes and castes not as separate and ...
Anthropologist Lalita Prasad Vidyarthi (28 February 1931 – 1 December 1985) was an Indian Anthropologist known for his work on the anthropology of religion and pioneering studies on the sacred complex in Indian society.
Born in India, Nag earned a master's degree in statistics from the University of Calcutta in 1946 and a PhD in anthropology from Yale University in 1961. [1] [2] He started his career in the Indian Statistical Institute [citation needed] and worked on the Anthropological Survey of India before joining the Department of Anthropology at Columbia University in New York in 1966; he was a lecturer ...