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Antropologia Para Leigos

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Começando pela evolução humana primitiva e viajando através das pandemias e políticas dos tempos modernos, a antropologia nos conta sobre nós! Aprender sobre a humanidade é uma forma fascinante de acrescentar um tempero a seu cotidiano, à medida que começa a ver a cultura dentro de um contexto e a compreender por que fazemos todas as coisas banais que fazemos. Este livro é a história de como chegamos até aqui e para onde vamos. (Marte, talvez?) Este livro é uma forma divertida de descobrir o que significa ser humano.

Paperback

First published January 1, 2008

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Cameron M. Smith

14 books9 followers

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5 stars
67 (29%)
4 stars
87 (38%)
3 stars
57 (25%)
2 stars
12 (5%)
1 star
4 (1%)
Displaying 1 - 23 of 23 reviews
684 reviews27 followers
October 21, 2013
The book I read to research this post was Anthropology For Dummies by Cameron M Smith which is a very good book which I bought from kindle. This book is an introduction to the subject of anthropology and tries to demystify what is often considered a difficult subject. As with a lot of for dummies books it does a good job in that respect. In the old days anthropology was a bit of a quack subject carried out by a few eccentrics and often they were what we call social darwinists and didn't respect the new culture and couldn't wait to assimilate it into western ideas or thought the studied culture was going to die out anyway so they would just do a study of it before it did. What more serious anthropologists have discovered is we can learn alot about other ways of life and it can potentially help benefit our society and nowadays this subject is taken very seriously and of course they are a lot let eager to assimilate every culture into the western way of life. We can also learn a lot about ourselves and why our society is the way it is from studying this subject. We know we are descended from primates and that there are over 200+ types of people which is probably simplifying it a bit. One of the big questions in this subject is why people are so diverse. We know the first people probably came out of eastern Africa & of course gradually spread. In many cases at certain points there were landbridges like the Bering Straits which have long since gone. In Australia surprisingly there have been humans for at least 40,000 years which is surprising because this was more remote from anywhere else. In contrast Western Europe has only had people for 20,000 years. One of the big revolutions in humankind was growing crops and domesticating animals. Rice has been grown for 10,500 years, horses have been used for 5,000 years and even guinea pigs were being bread for food 3,000 years ago in Peru, perhaps surprisingly.I enjoyed reading this book and it is a decent length.
Profile Image for Jurij Fedorov.
587 reviews85 followers
November 11, 2014
An interesting and easy read but does leave a lot of science out like all evolutionary psychology, gender studies and a few other things like all the science on Neanderthals after 2008 - and that's quite a bit. It is at times repetitive and could use a new version where all the repetitive parts are deleted making it 20-30 pages shorter. And then deleting all the "this is immoral so don't do this" parts, making it another 30 pages shorter. Still a great read and comes highly recommended, but only if there is nothing better out there explaining this field as it should not be hard to improve upon this book.
Profile Image for Cassandra Noelle.
40 reviews44 followers
June 19, 2012
This book was brilliant in helping me pass the General Anthropology DSST. It was terrible for everything else. Although this book was well-written and it presents its information in an easy-to-understand way, evolutionary theory was presented as fact and several derogatory statements were made about religion, Christianity, and Intelligent Design. Oh, well. At least I passed the test, but this is not a book that I would chose to read again.
Profile Image for Ramon Mirabal.
17 reviews
June 7, 2016
This book is ecxellently written,it is very informative in a smooth way ;I recommend it to anyone curious enough towards ourselves!

This book is excellenttly written,it is very informative in a smooth way;I recommend it to anyone curious enough towards ourselves!
Profile Image for Maggie.
52 reviews3 followers
August 14, 2013
Though I don't like thinking of myself as a dummy, this was a good introductory book.
Profile Image for Benjamin Barnes.
823 reviews12 followers
July 15, 2017
Wow

This is goes into Great Detail about our Ancestors and our Cultures Beautifully written and very entertaining. Check this out. One of the best For Dummies books I've read
939 reviews102 followers
January 12, 2020
Not bad, though it took me a loooong time to finish.
Profile Image for Ola.
246 reviews
March 28, 2023
3.5
can't believe THIS is the first book I finished since covid ate my brain lmao
111 reviews
September 28, 2023
Simple review of anthropology for non specialists, easy language, reasonable approach. The field itself may give theories non acceptable by most monotheistic.
Profile Image for Courtney Mosier Warren.
395 reviews4 followers
November 7, 2023
I read this for school -- by far the most boring of all the many, many, many books and articles I had to read this semester.
Profile Image for Mohamed Lemine El Waghf.
20 reviews5 followers
May 19, 2017
This is an ideal introduction for anyone who would want to learn about this fascinating subject.
It gives an overview and a pretty clear idea on anthropology and all of it's sub-fields.
I would definitely recommend it.
Profile Image for David Lacey.
Author 1 book13 followers
March 8, 2021
This book is for anyone who wants to know more about where we came from, who we are, and where we are going. A superb in depth insight into how we evolved into the civilised society we are today.
Profile Image for O.
16 reviews1 follower
May 17, 2022
This book provides a general overview of the field of Anthropology, including its colonialist and neo-colonialist failures. He acknowledges Anthro’s colonialist past, pretending these are bygone errors while self-assuredly upholding its neo-colonialist present. In his criticism of human rights violations, the author fails to contextualize colonial powers’ responsibility in inter-ethnic violence such as role of Belgium in constructing ethnic identity precipitating the Rwandan Genocide. He also makes the eco-fascist argument that climate change must be remedied by convincing people in the “Third World” (Global South) to ‘just stop having babies,’ ignoring that the vast majority of climate crisis is caused by western consumption and that the people most harmed (and therefore acutely aware of the need for climate justice) are actually people in the Global South.
Profile Image for Graham Cammock.
249 reviews5 followers
December 18, 2020
Awesome!

Literally the most important book I have ever read. I didn’t even know what I was looking for before I discovered this book. Although I had read one book on human evolution, that failed to satisfy me in some way, however, anthropology is the answer. If you are interested in the human past and evolution like me, what you need is anthropology.
Profile Image for K.D. Sarge.
Author 20 books121 followers
May 9, 2011
Very much worth my time. I needed a foundation to build on, and this book provided it, with some good doses of humor along the way. Some people take offense at the titles of these books. I think that's their loss. I like humor, myself.
Profile Image for Tim Gannon.
211 reviews
October 23, 2011
The study of humanity - to understand ourselves better - to try and not repeat the mistakes of the past - a fascinating and well-written primer - hopefully the insights the field has gleaned will help in my continued evolution as a person of the world : )
Profile Image for Winston.
20 reviews
March 24, 2015
This book was a great resource for learning the essentials and basics of Anthropology, especially if you're writing a novel, or paper that pertains to the study of Anthropology. It gives you an understanding of the field, the ins and outs.
Profile Image for Marcela.
249 reviews1 follower
January 19, 2011
OK, primarily strong on the physical anthro component which isn't the part that interests me as much, but probably would be helpful for students interested in "4-field" approach to anthro.
Profile Image for Rose B..
10 reviews9 followers
May 26, 2015
Perfect selection for those who are considering going into this amazing field. I haven't made much time for it, but it really explains anthropology in an easy-to-grasp kind of way.
Profile Image for Samrat Sen.
32 reviews5 followers
April 8, 2014
Good book for basic understanding of the subject and our past.
Displaying 1 - 23 of 23 reviews

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