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Cultural Anthropology: Global Forces, Local Lives

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Cultural Global Forces, Local Lives presents all the key areas of cultural anthropology as well as providing original and nuanced coverage of current and cutting-edge topics. An exceptionally clear and readable introduction, it helps students understand the application of anthropological concepts to the contemporary world and everyday life. Thorough treatment is given throughout the text to issues such as globalization, colonialism, ethnicity, nationalism, neoliberalism, and the state.



Changes for the third edition include a brand new chapter on medical anthropology and an updated range of cases studies with a fresh thematic focus on China. The book contains a number of features to support student learning,





A wealth of color images



Definitions of key terms and further reading suggestions in the margins



Summaries at the end of every chapter



An extensive glossary, bibliography and index.



 

1127 pages, Kindle Edition

First published June 1, 2009

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About the author

Jack David Eller

26 books11 followers
Prof. David Eller is a cultural anthropologist who has conducted field research among Aboriginal societies in Australia and now teaches anthropology in Denver, Colorado. His recent college textbook Introducing Anthropology of Religion is being hailed as the most significant introduction to the scientific study of religion in a decade. His previous AAP book Natural Atheism showed him to be as good a philosopher as scientist. Now we see he is equally skilled as a linguist and semanticist and can show that for knowledgeable atheists "atheism" means more than the absence of god-beliefs: it is the absence (indeed the rejection) of belief altogether.

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Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews
Profile Image for Lexie.
179 reviews149 followers
November 17, 2018
Interesting enough I suppose but a lot of it really wasn’t engaging enough. Anthropology turned into a pretty dull subject for me, my least favourite by far. There was also a lot of unnecessary stuff, reading the super short summaries compared to the long chapter just showed how little actually relevant stuff there was and that was annoying, ended up skimming through the later chapters I had to read for uni. Wasn’t horrible but, wouldn’t exactly recommend. I also have no desire to keep this like I have some of my other textbooks.
Profile Image for Trinity.
97 reviews
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May 24, 2023
Read for Michael Rodgers Anth 201 course. Cultural Anthropology
Profile Image for Jaime T.
172 reviews13 followers
January 30, 2021
ANT100 yeee. Boring but had some interesting parts. Read it and got the job done.
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