Anthropologist Overview
Do you want to trace your roots back in History? Does everything old fascinate you? Are you curious to know how people in the olden ages lived - their ways and culture? If you are the inquisitive kind with a quest for the unknown then you were born to be an Anthropologist.
As an Anthropologist you'll study human beings - their physical character, evolutionary history, racial classification, historical and present day geographic distribution, group relationships and cultural History. And in between all this if you happen to take a look at your bank balance, you won't be disappointed.
Anthropology can be characterised as the study and interpretation of diverse people and culture around the world. It's the science concerned with the study of the evolution of humankind. As an anthropologist you'll study and compare present and past societies and cultures. Writing and presenting reports on your findings is a part of your job profile.
One aspect of the job as an anthropologist involves extensive fieldwork - living with and studying different cultures of people from different societies. You have to observe and record family and group relationships and activities. Information gathered is on the basis of behaviour, language and biology of the societies.
All this is done to find out more about societies; how they developed, what were the causes that lead them to develop, and test new ideas, which may help to improve the present societies we live in. As an anthropologist you'll write and present your research findings to the concerned party for whom the research is carried out. You can even advice government departments and private organisations on cultural matters and the concerns of different people.
The elementary branches in Anthropology are:
Social Anthropology: It deals only with the social formation and history of a society.
Anthropologists here study the different cultural groups and trace the cultural evolution and patterns of change over a period of time.
Psychological Anthropology: It's a branch of anthropology that deals with the links between an individual and his culture. It uses psychology to analyse the different behavioural patterns of individuals of the same culture.
Cultural Anthropology: It uses archaeology, ethnography, ethnology, folklore, and languages to study different cultures of the diverse peoples of the world. Cultural anthropologists study socio-economic changes, changes in value systems in various societies, cultural difference and the origin of such difference, evolution of languages, man-woman relations in human societies in different cultures over the years, etc.
Physical or Biological Anthropology: It deals with physical and biological nature and characteristics of humans, chimps, gorillas, monkeys, etc., their past links and present conditions.
Archaeological Anthropology: Archaeological anthropologists analyse and study human civilisations, their origin and development by excavating the preserved historical remains of the past civilisations. They then outline how people of ancient civilisations lived, the tools they used, various societal relations that existed, their rituals, clothes, accessories, etc. The outcome of their work is a clear picture of ancient human civilisation.
Some other interesting sub disciplines in which you can specialise:
Otology: the study of bones and skeletal remains
Paleo-anthropology: the study of old dead primates of the ancient world. It includes study of both human and non-human primates.
Forensic Anthropology: analysing bones or skeletal remains of human in cases of legal importance.
Linguistic Anthropology: analysing origin and development of various languages, phonetics in the world.
Mostly anthropologists keep regular office hours except during field research when they have to work outside under difficult conditions.
If you need more information on this profile please feel free to contact us
Now.