Catálogo de publicaciones - revistas
Annual Review of Anthropology
Resumen/Descripción – provisto por la editorial en inglés
The Annual Review of Anthropology®, in publication since 1972, covers significant developments in the subfields of Anthropology, including Archaeology, Biological Anthropology, Linguistics and Communicative Practices, Regional Studies and International Anthropology, and Sociocultural Anthropology. The journal is essential reading for anthropologists, ethnologists, archaeologists, linguists, and scientists in related fields.Palabras clave – provistas por la editorial
No disponibles.
Disponibilidad
Institución detectada | Período | Navegá | Descargá | Solicitá |
---|---|---|---|---|
No detectada | desde oct. 1993 / hasta dic. 2023 | Annual Reviews | ||
No detectada | desde ene. 1972 / | JSTOR |
Información
Tipo de recurso:
revistas
ISSN impreso
0084-6570
ISSN electrónico
1545-4290
Editor responsable
Annual Reviews Inc.
País de edición
Estados Unidos
Fecha de publicación
1972-
Cobertura temática
Tabla de contenidos
Poetics and Performances as Critical Perspectives on Language and Social Life
Richard Bauman; Charles L. Briggs
Palabras clave: Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous); Anthropology; Cultural Studies.
Pp. 59-88
The Reorganization of the Sensory World
Thomas Porcello; Louise Meintjes; Ana Maria Ochoa; David W. Samuels
Palabras clave: Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous); Cultural Studies; Anthropology.
Pp. 51-66
Documents and Bureaucracy
Matthew S. Hull
Palabras clave: Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous); Anthropology; Cultural Studies.
Pp. 251-267
The Anthropology of Death Revisited
Matthew Engelke
<jats:p>This article brings together classic work in the anthropology of death, much of which focused on funerary rites, with more recent studies, some of which continue with the classic focus and some of which introduce distinct views and problematics. The anthropology of death has become a capacious field, linking to broader debates on violence, suffering, medicine, subjectivity, race, gender, faith, modernity, and secularity (among others). In much of this work, though, we find common concerns with, and recurrent considerations of, certain themes. This review focuses on two of the most important: the symbolic imaginaries of how life conquers death; and, even more centrally, the materiality of death. A range of topics are addressed, including putrescence, burial, bones, commemorations, debts, care, sovereignty, and personal loss.</jats:p>
Palabras clave: Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous); Cultural Studies; Anthropology.
Pp. 29-44
South Asian Language Practices: Mother Tongue, Medium, and Media
Chaise LaDousa; Christina P. Davis
<jats:p> Scholars such as Murray Emeneau and John Gumperz made India prominent in the development of sociolinguistics as a field of study through their simultaneous attention to difference and cohesiveness. Later, scholars stressed the ideological mediation of practice, especially the importance of colonial constructions that continue to be relevant in the postcolonial period. Work on specific notions such as mother tongue and medium of instruction, and the salience of English, led scholars to provide insights into multilingual practices in Bangladesh, Nepal, Pakistan, and Sri Lanka. Finally, a vast scholarship on an array of older and newer media forms ranging from early print publications to social media has posed questions about the possibilities of representation and participation. Ethnographic approaches to digital media that focus on the complex dynamics between ideologies and practices have put South Asia at the forefront of studies of communication. </jats:p><jats:p> Expected final online publication date for the Annual Review of Anthropology Volume 51 is October 2022. Please see http://www.annualreviews.org/page/journal/pubdates for revised estimates. </jats:p>
Palabras clave: Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous); Anthropology; Cultural Studies.
Pp. No disponible
Current Digital Archaeology
Colleen Morgan
<jats:p> Digital archaeology is both a pervasive practice and a unique subdiscipline within archaeology. The diverse digital methods and tools employed by archaeologists have led to a proliferation of innovative practice that has fundamentally reconfigured the discipline. Rather than reviewing specific technologies, this review situates digital archaeology within broader theoretical debates regarding craft and embodiment; materiality; the uncanny; and ethics, politics, and accessibility. A future digital archaeology must move beyond skeuomorphic submission and replication of previous structural inequalities to foment new archaeological imaginaries. </jats:p><jats:p> Expected final online publication date for the Annual Review of Anthropology Volume 51 is October 2022. Please see http://www.annualreviews.org/page/journal/pubdates for revised estimates. </jats:p>
Palabras clave: Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous); Anthropology; Cultural Studies.
Pp. No disponible
Retranslating Resilience Theory in Archaeology
Mette Løvschal
<jats:p> The environmental crisis is rendering increasingly large areas of the planet inhospitable. As it reaches a tipping point, global warming is initiating cascades of ecological transformation, mass extinction, and irreversible damage—all of them increasingly beyond human control. To mitigate this situation, we need intellectual tools that can call on both the sciences and the humanities and spark integrated approaches that address deep-time scales. Archaeology can make a substantial contribution here. This article reviews the merits and limitations of the resilience concept in archaeology. Despite its ever-increasing relevance, resilience is still frequently understood within the framework of positivist approaches and branches of systems thinking that cannot capture our unfolding predicament and pay too little attention to the embodied historical asymmetries between more-than-human social worlds. This review identifies the potential for reformulations of resilience theory and its attendant concepts within a less positivistic and human-centered conceptual register. New translations of resilience in archaeology pave the way for more nuanced approaches to concepts of history and their sociopolitical use, as well as alternative time dynamics of historical change. </jats:p><jats:p> Expected final online publication date for the Annual Review of Anthropology Volume 51 is October 2022. Please see http://www.annualreviews.org/page/journal/pubdates for revised estimates. </jats:p>
Palabras clave: Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous); Anthropology; Cultural Studies.
Pp. No disponible
Race and Racism in Archaeologies of Chinese American Communities
Kelly N. Fong; Laura W. Ng; Jocelyn Lee; Veronica L. Peterson; Barbara L. Voss
<jats:p> This article provides a critical review of archaeological research that addresses race and racism in Chinese American communities. Future directions for Chinese diaspora archaeologies include employing an Asian American studies praxis that centers community-engaged research, using diasporic frameworks, and applying emic language to naming material culture and identities. Other innovative archaeological scholarship on the racialization of Chinese Americans reframes Chinese American communities as part of larger multiethnic neighborhoods, highlights gender and sexuality, and traces the transpacific connections of Chinese transmigrants. The interventions outlined provide archaeologists who are engaged in the study of the Chinese American past with the pathways needed to begin practicing antiracist Chinese diaspora archaeologies. </jats:p><jats:p> Expected final online publication date for the Annual Review of Anthropology Volume 51 is October 2022. Please see http://www.annualreviews.org/page/journal/pubdates for revised estimates. </jats:p>
Palabras clave: Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous); Anthropology; Cultural Studies.
Pp. No disponible
Multimodality: Reshaping Anthropology
Mark R. Westmoreland
<jats:p> Multimodality offers anthropologists an inflection on the way we do research, produce scholarship, teach students, and relate to diverse publics. Advancing an expanding array of tools, practices, and concepts, multimodality signals a change in the way we pay attention and attend to the diverse possibilities for understanding the human experience. Multimodality recognizes the way smartphones, social media, and digital software transform research dynamics in unprecedented ways, while also drawing upon long-standing practices of recording and presenting research through images, sounds, objects, and text. Rather than flatten out ethnographic participant observation into logocentric practices of people-writing, multimodal ethnographies diversify their modes of inquiry to produce more-than-textual mediations of sensorial research experiences. By emphasizing kaleidoscopic qualities that give shape to an emergent, multidimensional, and diversifying anthropology, multimodality proposes alternatives to enduring and delimiting dichotomies, particularly text/image. These new configurations invite unrealized disciplinary constellations and research collaborations to emerge, but also require overhauling the infrastructures that support training, dissemination, and assessment. </jats:p><jats:p> Expected final online publication date for the Annual Review of Anthropology Volume 51 is October 2022. Please see http://www.annualreviews.org/page/journal/pubdates for revised estimates. </jats:p>
Palabras clave: Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous); Anthropology; Cultural Studies.
Pp. No disponible
Prehistory of Kinship
R. Alexander Bentley
<jats:p> As observed in recent centuries, the contemporary variety of kinship systems reflects millennia of human migration, cultural inheritance, adaptation, and diversification. This review describes key developments in prehistoric kinship, from matricentric hominin evolution to the Neolithic transition to agriculture and the heterogeneous resilience of matriliny. Starting with our hominin ancestors, kinship evolved among a cooperative breeding species to multilevel group structure among human hunter-gatherers, to substantial kinship changes brought on by the origins of intensified farming, to permanent settlements and unequal resource access. This review takes the approach that new forms of subsistence facilitated new equations of reproductive success, which changed cultural norms of kinship systems and heritable wealth. Subsequently, the formation of complex societies diminished kinship as the primary organizing principle of society. The article describes new methodologies and theoretical developments, along with critiques of bioarchaeological interpretations of prehistoric kinship. </jats:p><jats:p> Expected final online publication date for the Annual Review of Anthropology Volume 51 is October 2022. Please see http://www.annualreviews.org/page/journal/pubdates for revised estimates. </jats:p>
Palabras clave: Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous); Anthropology; Cultural Studies.
Pp. No disponible