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005 20250520094935.0
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020 _a394315162
040 _cNULRC
050 _aGN 24 .K68 1974
100 _aKottak, Conrad Phillip
_eauthor
245 0 _aAnthropology :
_bthe exploration of human diversity /
_cConrad Phillip Kottak
260 _aNew York :
_bRandom House,
_cc1974
300 _axviii, 517 pages :
_billustrations ;
_c26 cm.
504 _aIncludes bibliographical references and index.
505 _aThe Study of Man -- The Evolution of man through the Beginning of Food Production -- Culture, Race, and Language -- Sociocultural Adaptive Means -- The End of the Primitive World and the Contemporary Relevance of Anthropology.
520 _aOver the dozen or so semesters that I have taught Anthropology 101, a one-trimester introduction to general anthropology, at the University of Michigan, I have considered adopting one of the existing textbooks in the field. For various reasons, however, I never did. I have found most to be general anthropology cook-books, attempts to provide encyclopedias of anthropology more oriented toward anthropologists' data than toward the interests and organizing principles that hold the four sub-disciplines of anthropology together. Others, while less eclectic, seemed to forget the interests of contemporary college students, to supply an overabundance of detail, or to be written on a more advanced level than most beginners in anthropology appreciate. As I developed and modified my own course of forty-five lectures in introductory general anthropology, I found undergraduates receptive to my attempt to unify anthropology's subdisciplines through ecological and evolutionary principles. I wrote this book over about five semesters of Anthropology 101; the course improved the book, and the feedback on ideas and topics I was developing for the book improved the course.
650 _aANTHROPOLOGY
942 _2lcc
_cBK
999 _c6863
_d6863