Poststructuralism/Related Articles: Difference between revisions
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Revision as of 18:41, 11 January 2010
- See also changes related to Poststructuralism, or pages that link to Poststructuralism or to this page or whose text contains "Poststructuralism".
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- Anthropology [r]: The holistic study of humankind; from the Greek words anthropos ("human") and logia ("study"). [e]
- Claude Lévi-Strauss [r]: French anthropologist who developed structural anthropology as a method of understanding human society and culture. [e]
- Gender [r]: Gender is most often attributed to human beings or mammals as a dynamic, complex aggregate of learned behaviors and social or cultural constructs. Gender is distinguished from physiological and reproductive sexual traits, i.e. that individuals are male or female. [e]
- History of geography [r]: Chronology of the development and history of geography. [e]
- Judith Butler [r]: (1956—) American feminist post-structuralist philosopher, author of Gender Trouble. [e]
- Michel Foucault [r]: (1926-84) French philosopher and historian who tried to show power relations behind social institutions. [e]
- Philosophy of religion [r]: Branch of philosophy concerned with religion. [e]
- Postmodernism [r]: A broad collection of critical theories, political attitudes and literary and artistic practices that react to what postmodernists feel to be a modernist culture - one defined by belief in scientific knowledge, moral authority, historical progress and a foundationalist view of language and the self. [e]