Warsaw, Poland

Ethnology and Cultural Anthropology

Etnologia i antropologia kulturowa

Bachelor's
Table of contents

Ethnology and Cultural Anthropology at UW

Language: PolishStudies in Polish
Subject area: social
Kind of studies: full-time studies
University website: en.uw.edu.pl

Test: check whether Ethnology and Cultural Anthropology is the right major for you!

Etnologia i antropologia kulturowa

Find Out if Ethnology and Cultural Anthropology Is the Right Major for You!

1. Are you deeply curious about how different cultures live, think, and organize their societies?

2. Do you enjoy listening to people's stories, conducting interviews, and understanding their perspectives?

3. Are you interested in doing fieldwork—immersing yourself in a community to study it from the inside?

4. Do you enjoy analyzing symbols, rituals, language, and everyday practices to uncover deeper meanings?

5. Are you comfortable grappling with ambiguity, complexity, and multiple valid perspectives simultaneously?

6. Do ethical considerations—respect, consent, representation—matter to you when studying people?

7. Are you interested in connecting cultural understanding to broader social issues like identity, power, migration, or globalization?

8. Do you enjoy reading and synthesizing academic and ethnographic texts from different theoretical traditions?

9. Are you motivated to communicate cultural insights to others, whether in education, policy, media, or advocacy?

10. Do you enjoy working cross-culturally and adapting your approach when engaging with unfamiliar social norms?

Definitions and quotes

Anthropology
Anthropology is the study of humans and human behaviour and societies in the past and present. Social anthropology and cultural anthropology study the norms and values of societies. Linguistic anthropology studies how language affects social life. Biological or physical anthropology studies the biological development of humans.
Ethnology
Ethnology (from the Greek ἔθνος, ethnos meaning "nation") is the branch of anthropology that compares and analyzes the characteristics of different peoples and the relationship between them (cf. cultural, social, or sociocultural anthropology).
Anthropology
For Immanuel Kant, the term anthropology embraced all the human sciences, and laid the foundation of familiar knowledge we need, to build solidly grounded ideas about the moral and political demands of human life. Margaret Mead saw mid-twentieth-century anthropology as engaged in a project no less ambitious than Kant's own, and her Terry Lectures on Continuities in Cultural Evolution provide an excellent point to enter into her reflections.
Margaret Mead (1964) Continuities in Cultural Evolution. p. xii
Anthropology
Anthropology is destined to revolutionise the political and the social sciences as radically as bacteriology has revolutionised the science of medicine.
M.G. de Lapouge cited in: Thorstein Veblen (1898) "Why is Economics Not an Evolutionary Science" in: The Quarterly Journal of Economics Volume 12, 1898.
Anthropology
The great attraction of cultural anthropology in the past was precisely that it seemed to offer such a richness of independent natural experiments; but unfortunately it is now clear that there has been a great deal of historical continuity and exchange among those "independent" experiments, most of which have felt the strong effect of contact with societies organized as modern states. More important, there has never been a human society with unlimited resources, of three sexes, or the power to read other people's minds, or to be transported great distances at the speed of light. How then are we to know the effect on human social organization and history of the need to scrabble for a living, or of the existence of males and females, or of the power to make our tongues drop manna and so to make the worse appear the better reason? A solution to the epistemological impotence of social theory has been to create a literature of imagination and logic in which the consequences of radical alterations in the conditions of human existence are deduced. It is the literature of science fiction. … [S]cience fiction is the laboratory in which extraordinary social conditions, never possible in actuality, are used to illumine the social and historical norm. … Science fiction stories are the Gedanken experiments of social science.
Richard Lewontin "The Last of the Nasties?" in New York Review of Books (2/29/96)
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