Syllabus WBSET Anthropology
THE WEST BENGAL COLLEGE SERVICE COMMISSION
STATE ELIGIBILITY TEST
Subject: Anthropology Code
No. : 26
Syllabus
Unit - I
History,
development, aim and scope of Anthropology, relationship with other sciences, different
branches of Anthropology (including Linguistic Anthropology) and their interrelationship.
Research
methodology and methods: Concepts of epistemology, ontology and theoretical perspectives.
Types of research (qualitative and quantitative), research design, hypothesis. Fieldwork
and fieldwork tradition; Ethnography, Observation, Interview, Case Study, Life History,
Focus group, PRA, RRA, Genealogical Method, Schedules and Questionnaires, Grounded
Theory, Exploration and Excavation, GIS.
Statistics:
concept of variables, sampling, measures of central tendency and dispersion, parametric
and nonparametric bivariate and multivariate (linear regression and logistic regression)
statistical tests.
Techniques of
Analysis: Content analysis, Discourse analysis and Narratives.
Unit - II
Lamarckism,
Neo-Lamarckism, Darwinism, Neo-Darwinism, Synthetic theory, neutral theory of
molecular evolution, concept of cladogenesis and anagenesis, punctuated equilibrium,
selection.
Trends
in Primate radiation; Primate classification and distribution of extinct and
extant species. Characteristics of primates: morphological (hair), skeletal
(cranial, post cranial, dental, brain), physical (opposability of thumb),
locomotion (quadrupedalism, brachiation and bipedalism) and posture, Primate
social behaviour.
Extant
Primates
Distribution,
characteristics and classification. Prosimii (Tarsiioidea, Lorisoidea, Lemuroidea),
Anthropoidea (Ceboidea, Cercopithecoidea, Hominoidea). Morphological and anatomical
characteristics of Human, Chimpanzee, Gorilla, Orangutan and Gibbon
Fossils
of extinct Primates
Oligocene-Miocene
fossils – Parapithecus; Gigantopithecus, Aegyptopithecus, Dryopithecus, Ramapithecus
and Sivapithecus.
Pre-hominid
groups: Sahelanthropus tchadensis (Toumai), Orrorin tugenensis,
Ardipithecus ramidus.
Early
Hominids: Australopithecus afarensis, Australopithecus ramidus, Australopithecus
africanus, Australopithecus (Paranthropous) boisei, Australopithecus
(Paranthropous) robustus, Australopithecus bahrelghazali.
Early
Transitional Human: Homo habilis.
Hominid
Evolution
Characteristics
and distribution of Homo erectus in general, Special reference to the
fossil evidences discovered from Africa (Turkana boy), Asia (Java man and
Peking man), Europe (Dmanisi), Homo floresiensis (Dwarf variety)
Characteristics
of Archaic sapiens with special reference to Europe (Homo
heidelbergensis), Africa (Rhodesian Man), Asia (China, Jinniushan; India,
Narmada Man).
Neandertal
man: Distribution, salient features and phylogenetic position.
Characteristics
of anatomically Modern Homo sapiens with special reference to Africa (Omo),
Europe (Cro-magnon, Chancelade, Grimaldi), Asia (Jinniushan) and
Australia (Lake Mungo).
Dispersal
of modern humans: Out of Africa hypothesis, Multiregional hypothesis, Partial Replacement
hypothesis.
Unit - III
Modern
Human Variation: Typological Model, Populational Model and Clinal Model; overview
of Classification proposed by Blumenbach, Deniker, Hooton, Coon, Garn and Birdsell.
Ethnic
Classification and distribution of Indian Populations: H.H. Risley; B. S. Guha;
S. S. Sarkar.
Linguistic
distribution of ethnic groups.
Methods
of studying Human Genetics: Cytogenetics, Mendelian Genetics, Twin Genetics, Sib
Pair methods, Population Genetics, Molecular Genetics.
Cytogenetics:
cell cycle, standard karyotyping and banding techniques (G, C and Q), chromosomal
abnormalities, fluorescent in situ hybridization, Lyon’s hypothesis, importance
of telomere and centromere.
Linkage and
chromosome mapping, genetic imprinting.
Modes
of inheritance: Autosomal (dominant, recessive, codominance), sex linked, sex influenced,
sex limited, modifying genes, suppressor genes, selfish gene, multiple allelic inheritance,
multifactorial inheritance (stature and skin colour), polygeneic (dermatoglyphics-
Finger-ball Pattern types, Dankmeijer’s Index, Furuhata’s Index and Pattern
Intensity Index, Total Finger Ridge Count, Absolute Finger Ridge Count, Palmar formula
and mainline index, transversality, atd angle and flexion creases.
Population
genetics: Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium, definition and application; mating patterns
(random, assortative and consanguineous), inbreeding coefficient, genetic load,
genetic isolate, genetic drift, genetic distance); genetic polymorphisim
(balanced and transient).
Molecular
genetics: DNA, RNA, genetic code, protein structure and synthesis, concepts of RFLPs,
VNTRs, STRs, and SNPs, Mitrochondrial DNA, genic and genomic mutations.
Unit - IV
Human
Growth, development and maturation: definition, concepts. Basic principles of growth;
phases of growth: Prenatal and postnatal (growth and development of
different body parts, subcutaneous tissues and physiological variables). Growth
curves: Velocity, Distance, Acceleration and Scammon’s Growth curve. Catch up
and Catch down growth.
Aging
and senescence with special reference to somatic, skeletal and dental
maturation Factors affecting growth: Genetic and Environmental. Secular trends
in growth.
Methods
of studying human growth: Longitudinal, Cross-sectional, Mixed longitudinal, Linked
longitudinal.
Body
composition: Bone mass, body mass, percentage of body fat, segmental fat, body
age.
Human
Adaptation: Allen’s and Bergmann’s rule; Human Adaptability Programme; human adaptation
to heat, cold, high altitude.
Somatotyping:
Concept, Development (Kretschmer, Sheldon, Parnoll, Health-Carter) and its application.
Demography:
Multidisciplinary nature of demography and its relation with other disciplines.
Relationship between demography and anthropological demography. Fertility
(concept and determinants), Morbidity and mortality (concept and determinants),
Migration (concept and determinants), Selection intensity.
Unit - V
Concept
of prehistoric archaeology; ethno-archaeology, experimental archaeology, environmental
archaeology, settlement archaeology, cognitive archaeology, geo-archaeology, action
archaeology. Theoretical paradigms – descriptive to scientific period to
interpretative period.
Dating:
Typology,
seriation, geo-archaeological, obsidian, hydration, chemical dating of bones, oxygen
isotope, fluorine estimation, dendrochronology, radio-carbon, fission track,
thermoluminescence, potassium-argon, varve clay, cross dating, amino acid
racemization, palaeomagnetic.
Paleoenvironment:
Major
geological stages (Tertiary, Quaternary, Pleistocene, Holocene). Major climatic
changes during Pleistocene and post Pleistocene periods, glacial and
interglacial periods, ice age, pluvial and inter-pluvial climatic phases.
Evidences of quarternary climatic changes (moraines, varve, river terraces,
loess, sea level changes, beach sequences, sea core, fluviatile deposits,
palynology, palaeontology). Site formation.
Lithic
tool typology and technology:
Lower
Palaeolithic (pebble tools, chopper and chopping tools, bifaces, handaxes and cleavers);
Middle Palaeolithic (Clactonean, Levalloisian and Mousterian flakes, discoid cores,
tortoise core, fluted core, scrapers, point); Upper Palaeolithic (blade, knife,
blunted back, borer, burin, points); Mesolithic (microliths); Neolithic (ring
stone, grind stone, celt,
adze).
Overview
of Lithic Cultures of Europe:
Lower
Palaeolithic: Acheulian culture.
Middle
Palaeolithic: Mousterian culture.
Upper
Palaeolithic: Perigordian, Chatelperronian, Gravettian, Aurignacian, Solutrian,
Magdalenian.
Mesolithic:
Azilian, Tardenoisean, Maglamosean, Kitchen Midden, Natufian.
Early
Farming Cultures and Neolithic of the Near East: Sites
like Jericho, Jarmo, Çatal Huyuk, Shanidar.
Unit - VI
Lower
Palaeolithic Period in India
Pebble
tool culture: Soan
Acheulian
culture: Madrasian (Kortalayar Valley), Attirmpakkam, Didwana, Belan Valley, Bhimbetka,
Chirki-Nevasa, Hunsgi, Krishna Valley. Importance of Hathnora, Narmada valley.
Middle
Palaeolithic period in India: Belan valley, Bhimbetka,
Nevasa, Narmada valley.
Upper
Palaeolithic period in India: Renigunta, Billa Surgam,
Patne, Bhimbetka, Son and Belan Valleys, Visadi, Pushkar, Gunjan Valley.
Mesolithic
period in India: Mesolithic
economy and society. Post Pleistocene environmental changes. Development in
microlithic technology, composite tools and bows and arrows. Sites include
Bagor, Tilwara, Langhnaj, Adamgarh, Bagor, Chopani Mando, Bhimbetka, Sarai
Nahar Rai, Birbhanpur.
Neolithic
Period in India: Economic
and social consequences of food production. Settlements, population growth,
craft specializations, class formation and political institutions. Sites like
Burzahom, Gufkral, Ahar, Gilund, Nagada, Kayatha, Navdatoli, Eran, Nevasa,
Chandoli, Daimabad, Inamgaon, Prakash, Maski, Brahmagiri, Sangankallu,
Tekkalkota,
Piklihal, Nagarjunakonda, Daojali Hading, Kuchai, Sarutadu.
Prehistoric
Cave art from India: Bhimbetka,
Adamgarh.
Indus
Civilization: Expansion
of village sites. Development of metal technology, art and writing.
Architecture and city planning. Stages and theories of decline. Sites like
Amri, Kot Diji, Kalibangan, Mohenjodaro, Harappa, Lothal, Dholavira,
Rakhigarhi.
Pottery
and Traditions: Ochre
Coloured Pottery (OCP), Black and Red ware, Painted Grey Ware (PGW), Northern
Black Polished Ware (NBP). Distribution of the pottery types and period.
Bronze/Copper
Age: General
characteristics, distribution, people.
Iron
Age and Urban Revolution: General characteristics, distribution,
people.
Megaliths: concept
and types (menhir, dolmen, topical, cist, cairn circle, sarcophagi)
Unit - VII
Conceptual
Understanding of Social Anthropology:
Culture:
Attributes,
Holism, Universals, Acculturation, Enculturation, Transculturation, Culture
Change, Culture Shock, Cultural Relativism, Civilization, Folk-Urban Continuum,
Great and Little Tradition, Cultural Pluralism and World-View.
Society:
Groups,
Institutions, Associations, Community, Status and Role. Incest. Endogamy and
Exogamy. Rites of passage.
Social
Institutions:
Family:
Definitions,
universality of the family. Typological and Processual methods of studying the
family. Types of family – conjugal-natal, consanguineal, nuclear, joint, extended.
Rules of residence – Patrilocal, Matrilocal, Ambilocal, Bilocal, Neolocal, Avunculocal,
Virilocal, Amitalocal, Uxorilocal. Functions of family, Trends of change – urbanization,
globalization, industrialization, feminist movements.
Marriage:
Definition,
universality, types and functions (monogamy, polygamy – polyandry, polygyny,
hypogamy, hypergamy, levirate, sororate). Preferential and Prescriptive types.
Types
and forms of marital transactions – bride price and dowry. Marriage as
exchange.
Kinship:
Definition,
Descent, kinship terminology, matrilineal puzzle. Joking and avoidance. moiety,
phratry, clan and lineage. Types of kinship systems.
Economic
Anthropology: Definition
and relationship with Anthropology and Economy.
Theories
(Malinowski, Formal, Substantivist, Marxist). Livelihoods, Subsistence,
Principles of production, distribution, consumption; division of labour in
hunting-gathering, pastoral, swidden and agricultural communities. Exchange,
reciprocity, gifts and barter systems. Kula, Potlatch and Jajmani –
Anthropological explanations.
Legal
Anthropology: Anthropology
of Law, Social Sanctions.
Political
Organization: Definitions,
political processes in band, tribe, chiefdom and state systems. Conflicts and
social control. Nations and Nation-state, democracy.
Religion
and Belief Systems: Definitions,
animism, animatism, manaism, bongaism, totemism, taboo. Religious specialists –
witch, shaman, priest, medicine-man, sorcerer.
Magic
– definitions, types, approaches. Rituals.
Social
Change: Basic
ideas and concepts (Assimilation, Integration, Syncretism, Dominance and
Subjugation), Approaches.
UNIT-VIII
Theories
in Social Anthropology
Evolutionism
– Tylor, Morgan, Fraser, Maine, McLennan.
Diffusionism
– Three schools (Austro-German, British, American).
Historical
Particularism – Boas.
Functionalism
– Malinowski.
Structural-Functionalism
– Radcliffe-Brown, Firth, Fortes, Eggan, Parsons.
Structuralism
– Levi-Strauss.
Culture
and Personality/Psychological Anthropology – Mead, Benedict, DuBois, Linton, Kardiner,
Whiting and Child.
Cultural
Ecology, Environmental Anthropology, Neo-evolutionism (Leslie White, Julian Steward,
Marshall Sahlins).
Cultural
Materialism – Marvin Harris.
Symbolic
Anthropology – Victor Turner, Raymond Firth, Mary Douglas.
Cognitive
Anthropology – Roy D’Andrade, Stephen Tyler, Ward Goodenough.
Deep
Ethnography, Interpretive Anthropology – Clifford Geertz.
Anthropology
and Gender – Leela Dube, Renato Rosaldo, Marilyn Strathern, Zora Neale Hutson.
Postmodernism,
Poststructuralism, Postcolonialism – Foucault, Derrida, Bourdieu.
Ethnicity –
Barth, Jeffery, Weber.
UNIT - IX
Stages
in the Development of Indian Anthropology
Concepts:
Social
Stratification (eg. Caste), Scheduled Caste (SC), Dalit, OBC, Nomadic Groups.
Revivalist/Nativist movements, Peasant movements (Malabar and Telengana movements).
Tribe,
Scheduled Tribe (ST), Particularly Vulnerable Groups (PVTGs), Tribal movements
(Birsa and Naga movements), Tribal Development, Distribution. Indian Village
and Village Studies in India (S.C. Dube, McKim Marriott, Weiser, Scarlett
Epstein, M.N. Srinivas, F.G. Bailey)
Constitutional
Safeguards for SC and ST, Inclusion and Exclusion. Panchayati Raj Institutions
and other traditional community political organizations, Self-Help Groups
(SHGs).
Theoretical
ideas: Sanskritization,
Westernization, Modernization, Globalization, Sacred Complex, Nature-Man-Spirit
Complex.
Early
Indian Anthropologists and their contributions: G.S.
Ghurye, B.S. Guha, S.C. Roy, Iravati Karve, L.P. Vidyarthi, S.C. Dube, M.N.
Srinivas, N.K. Bose, Surajit Sinha, D.N. Majumdar, S.R.K. Chopra, Verrier
Elwin, S.S. Sarkar, Dharani Sen, T.C. Das, P.C. Biswas.
Unit – X
Concepts
and Theories: Applied
Anthropology, Action Anthropology, Engaged Anthropology, Experimental
Anthropology, Urban Anthropology,Public Anthropology, Public Archaeology,
Anthropology of Development, Medical Anthropology, Visual Anthropology, Genomic
Studies, Genetic Screening and Counseling, Forensic Anthropology, Food and
Nutritional Anthropology, Ergonomics, Kinanthropometry, Business Anthropology.
Community
Development Projects (Rural, Urban and Tribal); Revisits, Re-studies, Reinterpretations,
Intervention, Research Process and Social Impact Assessment (SIA). Anthropological
approaches in community studies: public health, education, nutrition, land alienation,
bonded labour, housing, alternative economy, livelihood, gender issues, relief,
rehabilitation and relocation, identity crisis, communication, training and
management, aging and the aged.
Development
Strategies (Plan/Sub Plan).
Role
of NGOs in Development. Anthropology and NGOs.
Empowerment
of Women, LGBT groups.
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