Acquiring Culture

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adult
Affective Culture
Category=JMC
Category=JMH
Child
cognitive
Cognitive Development
cross-disciplinary research
Crystal Boxes
cultural transmission in early childhood
development
Drawing Type
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
ethnography of childhood
Face To Face
Follow
gender role development
Held
high
High Chief
Inclined
indigenous psychology
island
Joanna Overing
Jungle People
kerkennah
Kerkennah Island
Lap
nonverbal learning mechanisms
play
Poisonous Knowledge
roles
sex
Sex Role
Sex Roles
shadow
Shadow Play
Sleeping Platform
Smooth
socialisation processes
Superhuman Beings
Twilight
Unstable
Wander
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138849457
  • Weight: 660g
  • Dimensions: 138 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 07 Jun 2016
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Until the 70s and 80s anthropologists studying different cultures had mainly confined themselves to the behaviour and idea systems of adults. Psychologists, on the other hand, working mainly in Europe and America, had studied child development in their own settings and simply assumed the universality of their findings. Thus both disciplines had largely ignored a crucial problem area: the way in which children from birth onwards learn to become competent members of their culture. This process, which has been called ‘the quintessential human adaptation’, constitutes the theme of this volume, originally published in 1988.

It derives from a workshop held at the London School of Economics which brought together fieldworkers who in their studies had paid more than usual attention to children in their cultures. Their experience and foci of interest were varied but this very diversity serves to illuminate different facets of the acquisition of culture by children, ranging in age from pre-verbal infants to adolescents.

Evolutionarily primed for culture-learning, children are responsive to a rich web of influences from subtle and indirect as in their music and dance to direct teaching in the family guided by culture-specific ideas about child psychology. Some of the salient things they learn relate to gender, status and power, critical for the functioning of all societies.

The introductory essay provides the necessary historical background of the development of child study in both anthropology and psychology and outlined how future research in the ethnography of childhood should proceed. The book concludes with an annotated bibliography providing a guide to the literature from 1970 onwards.