Adam is a social anthropologist who worked with the Isanzu in 1961 and 1962.
In due course the social anthropologists will record and codify these calls.
Who should social anthropologists hold that language makes so much difference?
But what is this paragon of a social anthropologist trying to find out?
The social anthropologist can find what he is looking for in either.
All the same, simply in terms of precedent, it seems clear that social anthropologists usually study "primitive" societies.
But for the social anthropologist that point is hardly relevant.
We believe that social anthropologists can contribute more to the debates, in both empirical and theoretical terms.
In the 20th century, most cultural and social anthropologists turned to the crafting of ethnographies.
Very often social anthropologists who study primitive tribes 'live' with them for a period of time using this role.