My discipline, anthropology, is not seen as a “growth" discipline, and departments are being closed down. But the world needs Anthropology and Anthropologists now more than ever!

Here are my 8 reasons for this:

1. POSSIBILITIES
At a time of polycrisis, when the destructive fallouts of capitalist modernity are ever more apparent, anthropology highlights that there are myriad alternative ways of thinking and living; that there is so much to learn from other peoples in the world. 1/n

@pvonhellermannn

I wonder if anthropology is deprecated in the UK now because it is not seen by conservatives as directly serving the needs of business - as part of the general attack on 'liberal education' - or precisely because it highlights alternative ways of thinking and living?

(They are not, of course, mutually exclusive.)

@GeofCox probably both. Another problem is that hardly anyone knows what anthropology is, and that is our own fault. I am trying to develop ways of telling people more on here, but it’s a learning process!

@pvonhellermannn @GeofCox

I have really very little idea what it is. I know what archaeology is, also what linguistics, psychology, politics, history and biology are. As far as I can see anthropology is a loose assemblage of these and other disciplines insofar as they relate to people. I am not sure that it proceeds by way of scientific method, or aspires to do so.

If the basic proposition is that "we need to understand people and their cultures better", then that's clearly a laudable aim, but I'm not sure if defines an academic discipline

@Anropa @pvonhellermannn @GeofCox

Anthropology is exactly what it says on the tin-- the study of humans. All the other disciplines you just listed (except biology, which is its own department), fall under the anthropology umbrella.

Of course it aspires to use the scientific method! Trouble is, humans are so intensely complicated that it's a very, very challenging science to actually do.

And it's one of the most important academic subjects there is.