01721nam a2200229 a 450000100060000000300080000600500170001400800410003103500140007204000320008604100080011808200220012610000280014824500850017626000360026130000240029735000100032150400290033150510900036065000180145070000230146862167BD-RjUL20211209081042.0190313s1975 mau b 000 0 eng  a(BD-RjUL) aDLCcDLCdDLCdBD-RjULbeng aeng00223a301bHAI 19751 aHayes, James R.,ecomp.10aIntroducing anthropology /c[Compiled by] James R. Hayes [and] James M. Henslin. aBoston :bHolbrook Press,c1975 aix, 434 p.;c22 cm. a$5.95 aIncludes bibliographies.0 aBenedict, R. The diversity of cultures.--Linton, R. One hundred per cent American.--Murdock, G. P. Anthropology as a comparative science.--Chagnon, N. A. Doing fieldwork among the Ya̦nomamö.--Liebow, E. A field experience in retrospect.--Simpson, G. G. The world into which Darwin led us.--Pfeiffer, J. E. Primate origins.--Brace, C. L. Human origins.--Washburn, S. L. and Lancaster, C. S. The evolution of hunting.--Adams, R. M. The origins of agriculture.--Childe, V. G. The birth of civilization.--LaBarre, W. The cultural basis of emotions and gestures.--Marshall, G. A. Racial classifications: popular and scientific.--Hoijer, H. The Sapir-Whorf hypothesis.--Brown, I. C. How people live together.--Mead, M. Families.--Lee, D. Individual autonomy and social structure.--Clark, M. and Anderson, B. G. An anthropological approach to aging.--Malinowski, B. Death and the reintegration of the group.--Hallowell, A. I. The impact of the American Indian on American culture.--Dobzhansky, T. Changing man.--Boulding, K. E. Where are we going, if anywhere: a look at post-civilization. 0aAnthropology.1 aHenslin, James M.,