(Internal Preview: Hurston was able to contribute to the subject of anthropology through the essays and fieldwork she did in her life.)
A. (Sub-point 1) What is anthropology, what do you do as an anthropologist, and why is anthropology significant to society?
1. What is anthropology? – Anthropology is the study of human beliefs/cultures and civilizations and their advancement.
2. What do you do as an anthropologist? - An anthropologist investigates and studies archaeological, sociohistorical, biological, and linguistically features of humankind. Anthropologists particularly like to relate the progression of …show more content…
(Sub-point 2) What did Hurston do as an anthropologist?
1. What did Hurston do as an anthropologist? - Hurston as an anthropologist improved ethnography which is the scientific description of the customs of individual peoples and cultures. She also interposed organizational methods as a “native” anthropologist which we are still studying about. It is a responsibility that the subject of anthropology has yet to recognize appropriately.
2. What did Hurston do as an anthropologist? - In 1929 Hurston traveled to the U.S. South and to the Caribbean (Haiti and Jamaica) as a series of fieldwork trips. Hurston’s first major anthropological work Mules and Men (1935) came from the research findings and became the original assortment of black folklore by an African American. Hurston’s second major anthropological fieldwork trip to Vodun became Tell My Horse (1938).
C. (Sub-point 3) Why Hurston works were significant and how these works made her an influential person?
1. Why were Hurston works significantly? - Hurston’s inclination to disagree and then to investigate with different ethnographic designs and procedures poses Hurston as the founder of the current ethnography which is named interpretive