journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33505045/-we-don-t-need-a-swab-in-our-mouth-to-prove-who-we-are-identity-resistance-and-adaptation-of-genetic-ancestry-testing-among-native-american-communities
#1
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jessica W Blanchard, Simon Outram, Gloria Tallbull, Charmaine D M Royal
Genetic ancestry testing (GAT) provides a specific type of knowledge about ancestry not previously available to the general public, prompting questions about the conditions whereby genetic articulations of ancestry present opportunities to forge new identities and social ties but also new challenges to the maintenance of existing social structures and cultural identities. The opportunities and challenges posed by GAT are particularly significant for many indigenous communities-whose histories are shaped by traumatic interactions with colonial powers and Western science-and for whom new applications of GAT may undermine or usurp long-standing community values, systems of governance, and forms of relationality...
October 2019: Current Anthropology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/30956284/-corruption-and-culture-in-anthropology-and-in-nigeria
#2
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Daniel Jordan Smith
This article examines the process of publication and reception of the author's book about corruption in Nigeria as a form of ethnographic evidence that is useful to interrogate the fraught relationship between the concepts of culture and corruption. The evidence points to multiple misunderstandings-but also to the powerful political purposes for which accusations of corruption (and, more specifically, notions of corruption as a "cultural " problem) can be wielded. The essay builds work in anthropology that takes seriously the reality that the people we study may read what we write, and uses local reactions to a monograph about corruption as analytical leverage to illuminate the anthropology of corruption...
April 2018: Current Anthropology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/29075043/temporality-and-positive-living-in-the-age-of-hiv-aids-a-multi-sited-ethnography
#3
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Adia Benton, Thurka Sangaramoorthy, Ippolytos Kalofonos
Drawing on comparative ethnographic fieldwork conducted in urban Mozambique, United States, and Sierra Leone, the article is broadly concerned with the globalization of temporal logics and how specific ideologies of time and temporality accompany health interventions like those for HIV/AIDS. More specifically, we explore how HIV-positive individuals have been increasingly encouraged to pursue healthier and more fulfilling lives through a set of moral, physical, and social practices called "positive living" since the advent of antiretroviral therapies...
August 2017: Current Anthropology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/28104924/the-adaptive-nature-of-culture-a-cross-cultural-analysis-of-the-returns-of-local-environmental-knowledge-in-three-indigenous-societies
#4
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Victoria Reyes-García, Maximilien Guèze, Isabel Díaz-Reviriego, Romain Duda, Álvaro Fernández-Llamazares, Sandrine Gallois, Lucentezza Napitupulu, Martí Orta-Martínez, Aili Pyhälä
Researchers have argued that the behavioral adaptations that explain the success of our species are partially cultural, i.e., cumulative and socially transmitted. Thus, understanding the adaptive nature of culture is crucial to understand human evolution. We use a cross-cultural framework and empirical data purposely collected to test whether culturally transmitted and individually appropriated knowledge provides individual returns in terms of hunting yields and health and, by extension, to nutritional status, a proxy for individual adaptive success...
December 2016: Current Anthropology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/27990025/the-fracture-of-relational-space-in-depression-predicaments-in-primary-care-help-seeking
#5
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Elizabeth Bromley, David Kennedy, Jeanne Miranda, Cathy Donald Sherbourne, Kenneth B Wells
Primary care clinicians treat the majority of cases of depression in the United States. The primary care clinic is also a site for enactment of a disease-oriented concept of depression that locates disorder within an individual body. Drawing on theories of the self and stigma, this article highlights problematics of primary care depression treatment by examining the lived experience of depression. The data come from individuals who screened positive for depressive symptoms in primary care settings and were followed over ten years...
October 2016: Current Anthropology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/25328164/maternal-behavior-by-birth-order-in-wild-chimpanzees-pan-troglodytes-increased-investment-by-first-time-mothers
#6
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Margaret A Stanton, Elizabeth V Lonsdorf, Anne E Pusey, Jane Goodall, Carson M Murray
Parental investment theory predicts that maternal resources are finite and allocated among offspring based on factors including maternal age and condition, and offspring sex and parity. Among humans, firstborn children are often considered to have an advantage and receive greater investment than their younger siblings. However, conflicting evidence for this "firstborn advantage" between modern and hunter-gatherer societies raises questions about the evolutionary history of differential parental investment and birth order...
August 2014: Current Anthropology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/25684782/-whatever-average-is-understanding-african-american-mothers-perceptions-of-infant-weight-growth-and-health
#7
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Amanda L Thompson, Linda Adair, Margaret E Bentley
Biomedical researchers have raised concerns that mothers' inability to recognize infant and toddler overweight poses a barrier to stemming increasing rates of overweight and obesity, particularly among low-income or minority mothers. Little anthropological research has examined the sociocultural, economic or structural factors shaping maternal perceptions of infant and toddler size or addressed biomedical depictions of maternal misperception as a "socio-cultural problem." We use qualitative and quantitative data from 237 low-income, African-American mothers to explore how they define 'normal' infant growth and infant overweight...
June 2014: Current Anthropology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/24991686/regime-shifts-in-balinese-subaks
#8
JOURNAL ARTICLE
J Stephen Lansing, Siew Ann Cheong, Lock Yue Chew, Murray P Cox, Moon-Ho Ringo Ho, Wayan Alit Arthawiguna
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
April 2014: Current Anthropology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/24991685/competitive-feasting-before-cultivation-a-comment-on-asouti-and-fuller
#9
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Brian Hayden
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
April 2014: Current Anthropology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/24991684/author-s-reply-to-pmid-24991682
#10
COMMENT
Barry S Hewlett, Steve Winn
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
April 2014: Current Anthropology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/24991683/comments
#11
COMMENT
(no author information available yet)
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
April 2014: Current Anthropology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/24991682/allomaternal-nursing-in-humans
#12
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Barry S Hewlett, Steve Winn
Few studies exist of allomaternal nursing in humans. It is relatively common among some cultures, such as the Aka and Efé hunter-gatherers of the Congo Basin, but it does not occur in other foragers such as the !Kung and Hadza of Southern and East Africa. This paper utilizes focal follow observations of Aka and Efé infants, interviews with Aka mothers, ethnographic reports from researchers working with hunter-gatherers, and a survey of the eHRAF cultures to try to answer the following questions: how often does allomaternal nursing occur, who provides it, and under what contexts does it take place? The study indicates that it occurs in many cultures (93% of cultures with data) but that it is normative in relatively few cultures; biological kin, especially grandmothers, frequently provide allomaternal nursing and that infant age, mother's condition, and culture (e...
April 2014: Current Anthropology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/24991681/author-reply-to-pmid-24991679
#13
COMMENT
Constantine V Nakassis
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
April 2014: Current Anthropology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/24991680/comments
#14
COMMENT
(no author information available yet)
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
April 2014: Current Anthropology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/24991679/suspended-kinship-and-youth-sociality-in-tamil-nadu-india
#15
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Constantine V Nakassis
This paper examines so-called fictive, or tropic, uses of cross-kin terms by college-going youth in Tamil Nadu, India. The paper shows how youth usages of cross-kin terms are motivated out of normative kinship practices, even as they decenter and suspend the semantic and pragmatic norms of such terms. Through such suspensions, forms of youth sociality and identity are performed. Such sociality and identity turn on the ability of tropes on cross-kin terms to distance their users from various hierarchies that youth associate with traditional adult respectability and propriety...
April 2014: Current Anthropology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/24991678/author-reply-to-pmid-24991676
#16
COMMENT
Claes Andersson, Anton Törnberg, Peter Törnberg
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
April 2014: Current Anthropology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/24991677/comments
#17
COMMENT
(no author information available yet)
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
April 2014: Current Anthropology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/24991676/an-evolutionary-developmental-approach-to-cultural-evolution
#18
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Claes Andersson, Anton Törnberg, Petter Törnberg
Evolutionary developmental theories in biology see the processes and organization of organisms as crucial for understanding the dynamic behavior of organic evolution. Darwinian forces are seen as necessary but not sufficient for explaining observed evolutionary patterns. We here propose that the same arguments apply with even greater force to culture vis-à-vis cultural evolution. In order not to argue entirely in the abstract, we demonstrate the proposed approach by combining a set of different models into a provisional synthetic theory and by applying this theory to a number of short case studies...
April 2014: Current Anthropology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/24991675/author-reply-to-pmid-24991673
#19
COMMENT
Douglas Roger
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
April 2014: Current Anthropology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/24991674/comments
#20
COMMENT
(no author information available yet)
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
April 2014: Current Anthropology
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