Psychological Anthropology for the 21st Century P 266 p. 18
内容
The ultimate theoretical and even ethnographic goals of anthropology depend on a mature conception of mental and embodied processes and a fully-realized theory of knowledge and of enculturation of experience. Anthropology has been in constant dialogue with allied disciplines such as psychology, philosophy, and linguistics, and many of the greatest anthropologists have made psychological questions part of, if not the key to, their work. Psychological Anthropology in the 21st Century provides a detailed survey of the intimate and enduring relationship between anthropology and psychology. Charting the developments, celebrating the accomplishments, and critiquing the inadequacies of the subdiscipline, Eller aims to communicate the exciting and important achievements in the study of cultural influences and variations in thought, emotion and experience. Combining history and theory with robust ethnography, Eller's masterful book clearly lays out the central role that psychological anthropology has played and continues to play in the discipline and should be essential reading for all students new to the study of psychological anthropology.