
Anthropology and Humanism
Edited by:
Edith Turner
Anthropology and Humanism concerns that central question of the discipline: what it is to be human. AH welcomes contributions from all major fields of anthropology and from scholars in other social science disciplines, as well as the humanities. It seeks to bring out the intricate and contradictory processes of life in other cultures--including those of anthropologists. Whether working with life histories or demographics, poetics or nutrition, artistic expression or scientific writing, this journal strives to maintain a focus on the human actors themselves.
TopNews and Announcements
Anthropology and Humanism is one of more than 20 publications featured in AnthroSource, the American Anthropological Association's online portal serving the research, teaching, and professional needs of anthropologists. Click here to learn more about AnthroSource!
Anthropology and Humanism is included in the INASP, HINARI and OARE programs. As a part of these initiatives, the journal is available (for free or at very low cost) in more than 100 developing world countries.
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TopHighlights
Read the most downloaded articles in 2009 from Anthropology & Humanism:
Anthropology from the Bones: A Memoir of Fieldwork, Survival, and Commitment
Cynthia Keppley Mahmood
Anthropology and Human Rights: Between Silence and Voice
Pedro Paulo Gomes Pereira
Ethnography and Fiction: Where Is the Border?
Kirin Narayan
Ethnography in a Time of Blurred Genres
Ruth Behar
Ethnography/Memoir/Imagination/Story
Paul Stoller
Images of Difference: Deaf and Hearing in the United States
Laura Lakshmi Fjord
Introduction to the Art of Ethnography
Edith Turner
Somatic Poetry in Amazonian Ecuador
Michael Uzendoski
The Active Voice: Narrative in Applied and Activist Anthropology
Jeanne Simonelli
Tools to Shape Texts: What Creative Nonfiction Can Offer Ethnography
Kirin Narayan
