Results 141 to 150 of about 5,041 (187)

The cranium from the Octagon in Ephesos. [PDF]

open access: yesSci Rep
Weber GW   +14 more
europepmc   +1 more source

In This Issue. [PDF]

open access: yesProc Natl Acad Sci U S A
europepmc   +1 more source
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.

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Itineraries and specificities of Italian medical anthropology

Anthropology and Medicine, 2012
This paper describes the birth (or rebirth) of Italian medical anthropology around the middle of the 1950s, and its subsequent complex development up to the present. During this fairly long process, the author played a role that was probably of some importance, that of both a direct witness and active participant.
Tullio Seppilli
exaly   +3 more sources

Contemporary Italian Cultural Anthropology

Annual Review of Anthropology, 1984
The field of cultural anthropology in Italy is parceled out among three closely related but institutionally distinct disciplines. The first, "ethnology" (etnologia), has the oldest tradition in Italian academics, although its first permanent chair was not established until 1967 (82, 84).
exaly   +4 more sources

Northerners versus southerners: Italian anthropology and psychology faced with the “southern question”.

History of Psychology, 2014
Following the Unification of Italy (1861), when confronted with the underdevelopment problems of the south that had given rise to the so-called "southern question," some Italian anthropologists and psychologists began to study the populations of the south from the psycho-anthropological point of view.
Renato Foschi
exaly   +4 more sources

Making the Invisible Ethnography Visible: The Peculiar Relationship Between Italian Anthropology and Feminism

open access: yes, 2021
The gender ethnography such as feminist anthropology is a textbook case of invisibility in Italy. The contemporary anthropological analysis has focused on deconstruction to unveil the mechanisms of power and the dynamics of the social hierarchy.
Michela Fusaschi
exaly   +2 more sources

Craniums, Criminals, and the ‘Cursed Race': Italian Anthropology in American Racial Thought, 1861–1924

open access: yesComparative Studies in Society and History, 2002
George Lipsitz, reflecting upon a growing body of American studies scholarship on whiteness, claims we now have a better understanding of “how people who left Europe as Calabrians and Bohemians became something called ‘whites' when they got to America.” As a summary of whiteness studies the statement is accurate.
D'Agostino, P.
openaire   +3 more sources

THE ITALIAN SCHOOL OF CRIMINAL ANTHROPOLOGY.

JAMA - Journal of the American Medical Association, 1896
exaly   +2 more sources

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