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020 _a0-03-028602-6
040 _bEspaƱol
_cBiblioteca Nora Rigby
080 _a301 H2982
100 _aHaviland, William A.
_9690
245 1 0 _aAnthropology / William A. Haviland
250 _a5
260 _aEstados Unidos de America: Holt, Rinehart and Winston
_c1989
300 _a638 P.
504 _aTable of contents, list of maps, analytical index, brief contents and bibliography
505 _aThis text is designed for college-level introductory anthropology courses. It tarts the basic divisions of anthropology-physical a cultural anthropology, including ethnology, linguistics, and prehistoric archeology-and presents the concepts added terminology germane to each. The aim of the text to give the student a through introduction to the principles and processes of anthropology. Because it draws from the research and ideas of a number of schools of anthropological thought, the student will be exposed to a mix of such approaches as evolutionism, historical particularism, diffusions, functionalism, and others. This inclusiveness reflects my conviction that, while each of these approaches has important things to say about human behavior, to restrict oneself to a particular approach is to cut oneself to a particular approach is to cut oneself off important insight.
590 _aCol. Soc
650 _a1. ANTRHOPOLOGY 2. SICUAK SCIENCE 3. SOCIOLOGY
_923610
942 _cBK
_2ddc
999 _c37507
_d37507