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  2. Ray Birdwhistell - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ray_Birdwhistell

    Ray L. Birdwhistell (September 29, 1918 – October 19, 1994) was an American anthropologist who founded kinesics as a field of inquiry and research. [1] Birdwhistell coined the term kinesics, meaning "facial expression, gestures, posture and gait, and visible arm and body movements". [2]

  3. Clyde Kluckhohn - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clyde_Kluckhohn

    Clyde Kluckhohn (/ ˈ k l ʌ k h oʊ n /; January 11, 1905 in Le Mars, Iowa – July 28, 1960 near Santa Fe, New Mexico), was an American anthropologist and social theorist, best known for his long-term ethnographic work among the Navajo and his contributions to the development of theory of culture within American anthropology.

  4. Implicit Meanings - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Implicit_Meanings

    The volume Implicit Meanings was first published by Routledge in 1975 and was reprinted in 1978 and 1991. It went into a second edition in 1999, with revisions and additional material (including a new preface), which was reprinted in 2001, and again in 2003 as volume 5 of Mary Douglas: Collected Works (ISBN 0415291089).

  5. Philosophical anthropology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philosophical_anthropology

    Philosophical anthropology, sometimes called anthropological philosophy, [1] [2] is a discipline dealing with questions of metaphysics and phenomenology of the human person. [ 3 ] Philosophical anthropology is distinct from Philosophy of Anthropology, the study of the philosophical conceptions underlying anthropological work.

  6. Practice theory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Practice_theory

    Practices are conceptualized as "what people do," or an individual's performance carried out in everyday life. Bourdieu's theory of practice sets up a relationship between structure and the habitus and practice of the individual agent, dealing with the "relationship between the objective structures and the cognitive and motivating structures which they produce and which tend to reproduce them ...

  7. Educational anthropology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Educational_anthropology

    In 1896, Franz Boas established the department of anthropology at Columbia; [18] it was only two years later, in 1898, that Teachers College was founded. [19] Although it was not until 1935 that a course entitled "Anthropology and Education" was offered, some students trained in both programs, including Elsie Clews Parsons. [19]

  8. Non-place - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Non-place

    Examples of non-places would be motorways, [1] hotel rooms, airports and shopping malls. The term was introduced by Marc Augé in his work Non-places: introduction to an anthropology of supermodernity, [ 2 ] although it bears a strong resemblance to earlier concepts introduced by Edward Relph in Place and Placelessness and Melvin Webber in his ...

  9. George Spindler - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Spindler

    George Dearborn Spindler was a leading figure in 20th-century anthropology and regarded as the founder of the anthropology of education. [1] [2] He edited a very large series of short monographs, turning nearly every significant ethnographic text of the 20th century into a shorter work accessible to the public and to anthropology students everywhere. [3]