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Seeing the relevance of Anthropology in Everyday Life

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Your accent is we-ahd

August 21, 2015 by Carie Little Hersh Leave a Comment

Your accent is we-ahd

I grew up a Navy brat, bouncing from coast to coast in the U.S. until the 11th grade, when I hunkered down in the South for more than a decade. Although I had visited family in New England, and my grandmother retained her New Hampshire accent through five decades of living in North Carolina, when I moved north after grad school I was unprepared for the radically unique accent, temperament, and driving style that is Boston. After I made the transition north in 2007, the learning curve was steep. Driving successfully required a transition from extreme patience, a trait required in North Carolina (where drivers will stop at a green light for 30 seconds to allow another driver to enter the road), to extreme efficiency in the Boston area (where drivers feel it is a moral imperative to honk … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Enculturation / Learning Culture, Ethnicity, Language Tagged With: American Regional Difference, Boston Accent, Cultural Bias, Cultural Relativism, Culture, Culture Shock, Emic, Ethnicity, Ethnocentrism, Etic, Language, Linguistics, Marked and Unmarked Ethnicities, Representation, Reverse Culture Shock

So What Exactly is ANTHROPOLOGY?

August 21, 2015 by Carie Little Hersh 12 Comments

I had no idea what anthropology was when I began college, I just knew I loved the course titles.  “Language and Culture”. “Gender, Sex, and Sexuality”. “Religion and Modernity”. The cultural anthropology classes covered everything, everywhere, from race to medicine to law to food, from the Caribbean to Africa to Southeast Asia to Kansas. The archaeology classes covered history around the globe, from the birth of nation states to ancient trade routes to the way people made cloth, and everything in between. The biological anthropology classes examined the biology of humans and our ape cousins, and how we adapted over time to survive in amazingly diverse settings. The linguistic anthropology classes examined how we are physically designed for language to the innumerable forms that language … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Culture Tagged With: Anthropology, Cultural Anthropology, Culture, Public Anthropology blog

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Dr. Carie Little Hersh

Dr. Carie Little Hersh is an American cultural anthropologist, former attorney, and teaching professor in Anthropology at Northeastern University. This is her personal blog about anthropology and its relevance to everyday life.

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Disclaimer

As someone who was an attorney for between 3-7 minutes, I feel compelled to state that the views on this blog are mine and don’t reflect those of my employer.

 

relevANTH is a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for us to earn fees by linking to Amazon.com and affiliated sites.

 

Bonus Disclaimer: References to specific products and services on this podcast do not constitute or imply an endorsement and the views and opinions expressed by guests do not necessarily state or reflect those of either relevANTH or Dr. Hersh.

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