Collection Development Policies:
Anthropology
Purpose:
The Department of Anthropology offers courses
leading to a Bachelor of Arts, Master of Arts, and Doctor of Philosophy in
Anthropology. Research and instruction is performed in four major subfields,
including archaeology, cultural/social anthropology, physical anthropology,
and linguistic anthropology. Graduate study emphasizes three tracks: archaeology,
social/cultural anthropology, and evolutionary anthropology. This statement
excludes anthropological linguistics because it is treated in the
Linguistics policy. Anthropology students also
rely on interdisciplinary resources related to other departments, including
Biological Sciences (human evolution and race);
Comparative Ethnic Cultures
(native peoples, cultural change and conflict, prehistory of native peoples, etc.);
Communication (media in
global perspective, speech);
Human Development
(study of infant, child, and adolescent development);
Economics
(international development and the economic systems of aboriginal peoples);
Environmental Science and Regional Planning
(human ecology and past environments);
Fine Arts
(the arts and crafts of aboriginal peoples);
Geology
(quaternary environments, geoarchaeology, and stratigraphy);
History
(American Indians since the fifteenth century, evolution of societies,
historical ethnography, world archaeology, etc.);
Music
(ethnomusicology);
Psychology
(human nature, the effects of culture on personality);
Religious Studies
(ancient and minor religions);
Sociology
(sexuality, social organization, cross-cultural influences, kinship);
and
Women's Studies
(gender issues, Native American women, feminism, etc.).
In addition, the Library's Media Materials and Reserve unit contains many
relevant films and other video resources appropriate for classroom support.
The Library also has depository arrangements to receive relevant federal
and state government publications. The Department of Anthropology provides
specialized laboratories for physical anthropology, lithic analysis,
paleoecology, geoarchaeology, and zooarchaeology study and research. The
Museum of Anthropology, housed in College Hall, is a federal archaeological
repository and contains both ethnographical and archaeological research collections.
General Collection Guidelines:
- Languages:
English is the primary language of the collection.
Works written in other languages are ordinarily purchased only in English translations.
Collecting of works in American Indian languages is treated in the
Linguistics policy.
- Chronological Guidelines:
Interest begins with prehistory,
as exemplified in archaeology and physical anthropology, and continues through
the present time, as exemplified in contemporary examples of social and
cultural anthropology.
- Geographical Guidelines:
Primary emphasis is on North America
(particularly western North America), Mesoamerica, South America, the Arctic, the
Pacific, Sub-Saharan Africa, and South Asia.
- Treatment of the Subject:
Titles on methodology, models and
simulation, and theory are collected on a broad basis. Biographies are purchased
when the subject is an anthropologist or when the subject illustrates ethnological
context (e.g. the biography of any member of an aboriginal group). Legal and ethical
aspects of anthropology (e.g., the rights of native peoples and ethnic minorities)
are collected.
- Types of Material:
Books and periodicals are the major types
of materials collected in both print and/or electronic format, subject to
general collection guidelines. Anthropological society, university, and
museum publications are purchased, as well as publications from international
organizations and national and state governments. Videotapes, slides, and
audio materials are purchased when funds are available. Upper-level
textbooks may be selectively purchased.
- Date of Publication:
Emphasis is primarily on current publications.
Older materials are acquired chiefly as reprints or microform, but resources
pertaining to the geographic areas of specialization and the works of major
anthropologists are purchased whenever available.
Observations and Qualifications by Subject with
Collection Level:
Archaeology:
C(1) / B
Exceptions:
North America west of the Mississippi,
the Arctic, and Mesoamerica: B
Theory and methodology, lithic analysis, geoarchaeology,
zooarchaeology: B
Classical Greece and Rome:
D
Cultural and Social Anthropology:
C(1) / B
Collecting for this area is supplemented by that done for
History,
Sociology,
Psychology,
Communication,
Comparative Ethnic Cultures,
Economics,
Fine Arts,
Human Development,
Music,
Religious Studies,
and various literatures.
Exceptions:
North America, Equatorial Amazonia, the Arctic, the Pacific,
Sub-Saharan Africa, Columbia Plateau: B
Theory and methodology, cultural ecology, gender, human behavioral
ecology, medical anthropology, psychological anthropology: B
Linguistics:
See:
Linguistics
Physical Anthropology:
C(1) / B
Collecting for physical anthropology is supplemented by collecting done for
the
Animal Sciences,
Biological Sciences,
Environmental Science and Regional Planning, and
Geology.
Exceptions:
Human biological anthropology, human evolution, human adaptation
to the biocultural environment, molecular anthropology, theory
and methodology: B
Mary Nofsinger
Spring 2004