HISTORY OF SOCIAL ANTHROPOLOGY (COURSE CODE: SANB 2032) FSS, Masaryk Univ. Brno When: Winter/Spring 2022, Thurs from 16:00 to 17:40 (CET). Where: U43 Course convenor: Dr Patirck LAVIOLETTE 246133@mail.muni.cz / patrick.laviolette@fss.muni.cz Office Hours: Tuesdays 14:00 16:00 (or Zoom appointment) Office: Room 3.48, Joštova 218/10. 602 00 Brno Phone: +420 549 49 49 04 Or by Zoom appointment: WHO ARE YOU ?? What are some of the main ways in which we go about doing Science?? The Scientific Method, yes, but what does this involve?? In thinking through the academic discipline of social anthropology, we will ask such questions as: how is it practiced? How long has it existed? How is it disseminated? When did it start? When will it end? When was it most and least important? Where are the centres of its production and consumption? Where will it grow and/or shrink? Where do anthropologists do their research? What do they examine? What methods and theories do they use? What disciplines influence it most and are the disciplines that it most resembles? Who are the main figures in establishing its international importance? Who’s been left out of such narratives. We ask the basic inquisitive questions, Then we go about finding the best possible answers, in as many ways as we can. And how do we verify the findings? Through a system of Peer Review, i.e., assessments by experts in the discipline. This is meant to question the results, challenge, the methods and theoretical Framework – often questioning the Initial questions themselves. Reconstruction of a map of world by Herodotus (circa 450 BC) (1332–1406) Arab scholar in what is now Tunisia. Ibn Battuta (1304–1369) Tangier Robert Fludd, Chain of Being, 1617 1579, Great Chain of Being ‘Scala Natura’ from Didacus Valades, Rhetorica Christiana. Adolf Bastian [1826 -1905] Bremen, DE Der Mensch in der Geschichte (1860) Professor of Ethnology Berlin. Director of the Imperial Museum Main contributor to a new Museum für Völkerkunde, est. in 1868 Wilhelm Wundt (1832–1920), Völkerpsychologie Cultural psychology, Leipzig. •Te Poho-o-Rawiri, Gisborne, Rotorua School of Māori Arts and Crafts carvers (including John Taiapa, Pine Taiapa and Wihau), opened 1925 • Raharuhi Rukupo (of Rongowhakaata) Te Hau-Ki-Turanga, 1840-42 •United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, Entrance, Washington, D.C. James Ingo Freed (1930-2005)