Malinowski'nin Trobriand Adaları'ndaki saha araştırmasından modern dijital toplumlara uzanan bu yolculukta, katılımcı gözlem ve kültürel rölativizmin toplumsal dokuyu nasıl aydınlattığını keşfedin.

Anthropology pulls you out of the water so you can see it for what it is. It’s a subversive science because it says: 'Things don't have to be this way. Look at all these other possibilities.'
Creado por exalumnos de la Universidad de Columbia en San Francisco
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Creado por exalumnos de la Universidad de Columbia en San Francisco

Lena: Have you ever thought about what it would be like to just drop everything and move to a remote island for three years? I mean, not for a vacation, but to actually live as part of the community?
Miles: You’re talking about Bronislaw Malinowski, right? He’s basically the father of ethnography. He spent three years in the Trobriand Islands near New Guinea, and it totally changed how we look at social and cultural anthropology.
Lena: Exactly! It’s wild because back then, the goal was to record "disappearing" cultures before they became Westernized. But now, it’s evolved so much. We aren't just looking at "primitive" groups anymore; we’re looking at ourselves—digital spaces, urban life, even medical systems.
Miles: Right, it’s that "holistic" approach. You can't just look at one thing, like a wedding, without understanding the religion, the economy, and the gender roles of that society.
Lena: It’s all connected. So, let’s dive into how Malinowski’s fieldwork set the stage for how we study human behavior today.