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Cultural Anthropology
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Cultural Anthropology

13th Edition
  • Serena Nanda - John Jay College of Criminal Justice, City University of New York
  • Richard L. Warms - Texas State University - San Marcos, USA


May 2023 | 560 pages | SAGE Publications, Inc
Cultural Anthropology integrates critical thinking, explores rich ethnographies, and prompts students to think creatively about today’s culture and society. Authors Serena Nanda and Richard L. Warms show how historical studies and anthropological techniques can help readers reflect on the nature, structure, and meaning of human societies. Updates to the Thirteenth Edition include a new chapter on race and ethnicity; emphasis on areas such as inequality, power, gender, race, and history; discussions of issues around medical care and public health; and new features that reflect changes in world culture.

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Chapter 1: Anthropology And Human Diversity
The Fields of Anthropology

 
Some Critical Issues in Anthropology

 
Why Study Anthropology

 
The Global and the Local: The Anthropology of Violence

 
 
Chapter 2: Doing Cultural Anthropology
Anthropology in Historical Perspective

 
Anthropological Techniques

 
Some Critical Issues in Ethnography

 
Ethics in Fieldwork and Anthropology

 
The Global and the Local: The Anthropology of Pandemics and Other Disasters

 
 
Chapter 3: The Idea Of Culture
Defining Culture

 
Culture Is Made Up of Learned Behaviors

 
Culture Is the Way Humans Use Symbols to Classify Their World and Give It Meaning

 
Culture Is an Integrated System – or Is It?

 
Culture Is a Shared System of Norms and Values – Or Is It?

 
Culture Is the Way Human Beings Adapt to the World

 
Culture Is Constantly Changing

 
The Global and the Local: Is There an American Culture?

 
 
Chapter 4: Communication
Human and Animal Communication

 
Origins and Acquisition of Human Language

 
The Structure of Language

 
Language and Culture

 
Nonverbal Communication

 
Language Change

 
The Global and the Local: Language, Identity, and Assimilation

 
 
Chapter 5: Making a Living
Human Adaptation: The Environment and Technology

 
Foraging

 
Pastoralism

 
Horticulture

 
Agriculture

 
Industrialism

 
The Global and the Local: Climate Change and Food Choices

 
 
Chapter 6: Economics
Economic Behavior

 
Allocating Resources

 
Organizing Labor

 
Distribution: Systems of Exchange and Consumption

 
Capitalism

 
The Global and the Local: Paying for College in the United States

 
 
Chapter 7: Political Organization
Hierarchies: Power, Ideology, Gender, and Conflict

 
Band Societies

 
Tribal Societies

 
Chiefdoms

 
State Societies

 
The Nation-State

 
The Global and the Local: Citizenship and Statelessness

 
 
Chapter 8: Social Stratification: Class and Caste
Theories of Social Stratification

 
Criteria of Stratification: Power, Wealth, and Prestige

 
Social Class in the United States

 
Caste Systems

 
The Global and the Local: The Gig Economy

 
 
Chapter 9: Race and Ethnicity
Race and Biology

 
Race, Culture, and History

 
Race and Caste in the United States

 
Racial Classification in Brazil

 
Ethnicity

 
Immigration and Ethnicity in the United States

 
The Global and the Local: Inequality, Race, Ethnicity, and COVID-19

 
 
Chapter 10: Kinship
Kinship: Relations Through Descent and Marriage

 
Patrilineal Descent

 
Matrilineal Descent

 
Other Systems of Descent

 
Classifying Kin

 
The Global and the Local: Kinship and Immigration, and Transmigration

 
 
Chapter 11: Marriage, Family, And Domestic Groups
Marriage and Marriage Rules

 
Marriages With Multiple Partners

 
Exchanges of Goods at Marriage

 
Types of Families

 
The Global and the Local: Caring for the Elderly

 
 
Chapter 12: Gender
Sex, Gender, and Sexuality

 
Gender Ideologies: Female Sexuality and Male Prestige Behavior

 
Variability in Gender and Sexuality

 
Theories of Gender and Stratification

 
Gender Relations and Systems of Production

 
Changing Gender Relationships in an Interconnected World

 
The Global and the Local: Women’s Rights in Global Perspective—How Important Is Wealth?

 
 
Chapter 13: Religion
Religion in Society

 
Beliefs: Stories, Symbols, and the Supernatural

 
Practices: Addressing the Supernatural

 
Religious Practitioners

 
Religion and Change

 
Fundamentalism and Religious Change

 
The Global and the Local: The Globalization of Religion in the United States

 
 
Chapter 14: Creative Expression: Anthropology And The Arts
The Arts in Cultural Context

 
Art and the Expression of Cultural Themes

 
Art and Politics

 
Art and Expressing Identities

 
Art and Representing the Other

 
World Art: Culture, Marketing, and Tourism

 
The Global and the Local: Art and Censorship

 
 
Chapter 15: Making the Modern World: Conquest, Colonialism, and Resistance
European Expansion: Motives and Methods

 
The Eras of Colonialism

 
Making Colonialism Pay

 
Decolonization

 
The Global and The Local: Globalization, Nationalism, and Colonialism

 
 
Chapter 16: Anthropology in the 21st Century: Understanding and Acting in a Challenging World.
The Changing Political and Economic Environment

 
The Persistence of Poverty and Instability

 
Multinational Corporations

 
Urbanization

 
Population Pressure

 
The Rights of Indigenous People

 
Environmental Challenges

 
Looking to the Future

 

Supplements

Instructor Resources
LMS cartridge included with this title for use in Blackboard, Canvas, Brightspace by Desire2Learn (D2L), and Moodle

The LMS cartridge makes it easy to import this title's instructor resources into your learning management system (LMS). These resources include:
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Key features
NEW TO THIS EDITION:
  • The new edition is available in SAGE Vantage, an intuitive learning platform that integrates quality SAGE textbook content with assignable multimedia activities and auto-graded assessments to drive student engagement and ensure accountability. Unparalleled in its ease of use and built for dynamic teaching and learning, Vantage offers customizable LMS integration and best-in-class support. Select the Vantage tab on this page to learn more.
  • New separate Race and Ethnicity chapter expands coverage of this important topic and helps students understand that race and ethnicity are social and historical constructs.
  • Ethnography features have been moved into the main flow of the text or as reading assignments to allow instructors using SAGE Vantage to track students’ responses to questions about this material.
  • New topics include gestures and emoticons; culinary thrill seekers (about humans and flavor); climate change and food choice; the gig economy; inequality, race, and COVID; working with female heroin addicts; and designing a picture book for Indigenous kids.
  • Coverage of medical anthropology has been increased, with new material on Fadiman’s The Spirit Catches You and You Fall Down, pandemics and public health emergencies, anthropology and nutrition, the connections among race, health and the environment, COVID 19, elder care, working with heroin addicts, and the health impacts of colonization. Many of the ethnographies are now assignable activities in the Vantage courseware platform.
  • Tables, charts, and maps have been updated throughout, and there are more than 300 new references to the latest research.
KEY FEATURES:
  • Celebrates the role of ethnography in anthropology and introduces students to a wide range of contemporary and historical ethnographies that provide an invaluable record of cultures around the world.
  • A carefully developed visual and pedagogical program inspires students to see the world through an anthropological lens.
  • The book covers both historical and contemporary theories without any insistence on any particular approach.
  • Contemporary, real-world global issues appeal to introductory students from any discipline.
  • Anthropology Makes a Difference and The Global and the Local features show students what they can do with an anthropology degree.

The extraordinary developments of the last five years have led us to rethink the organization of the book and many of the examples and analyses that we use. There are many hundred small changes and more than 300 new references. Every chapter has been revised and all statistics, graphs, and charts updated. However, readers will also notice several large changes. The biggest of these is the introduction of a new chapter on race and ethnicity. This chapter adds a great deal of new material and analysis to the information found in the stratification chapter in earlier editions.

A second critical change is that in previous editions, all ethnographies appeared as boxed features titled “Ethnography.” In the new edition, some ethnographies have been moved into the main flow of the text (particularly in Chapter 5, Making a Living) others now appear as Reading Assignments. This allows instructors who use Sage Vantage to track students’ responses to questions about this material.

One of the critical ways in which we have responded to changes in world culture and in anthropology is through the features in each chapter. Some that are new to this edition include gestures and emoticons in Chapter 4, Culinary thrill seekers (about humans and flavor), and climate change and food choice, both in Chapter 5, the gig economy in chapter 8, Inequality, Race, and COVID in Chapter 9, working with female heroin addicts in chapter 11, and Designing a Picture Book for Indigenous Kids in Chapter 14.

Issues around medical care and public health play in increasingly important role in anthropology and are an area of student interest. Although we do not have a chapter on medical anthropology, we incorporate it in many places throughout the book. You’ll find it particularly in our discussion of Fadiman’s The Spirit Catches You and You Fall Down in Chapter 3, Pandemics and Emergencies in Chapter 3, Anthropology and Nutrition in Chapter 5, Race, Health and the Environment, and COVID 19 in Chapter 9, Elder Care in Chapter 10, Working with Heroin Addicts in Chapter 11, Vaccine Refusal in Chapter 12, Health, Colonialism and History in Chapter 14, and in several places in our final chapter.