Optional

How to Ace Anthropology Optional: Book list and Basic Plan

Note: There a total of 3 blog posts on Anthropology. This first article primarily talks about my book list and the basic approach I followed. The second and third articles deal with topic wise detailed plan for Paper I and II respectively.

Marksheet

Book List

These are the sources I referred to for my Anthropology optional. There is no need to read these books from end to end. You must go topic wise as per the syllabus and read these books to get a good grip over the subject. Apart from these, use online sources and newspapers to enrich your knowledge and answer content.


Paper I

  1. Braintree material
  2. Physical Anthropology – P Nath
  3. Anthropology Simplified – Vivek Bhasme (very good source for diagrams and answer structuring)
  4. Anthropology – Ember and Ember

Paper II

  1. Indian Anthropology -Nadeem Hasnain
  2. Tribal India – Nadeem Hasnain
  3. Anthropology Simplified- Vivek Bhasme
  4. The Tribal Culture of India – LP Vidyarthi
  5. Xaxa Report
  6. January 2014 edition of Yojana- Tribal and Marginalized Communities

Note on diagrams and answer writing

While preparing for CSE 2017, because of my hectic work schedule I was hard pressed to just finish the syllabus in the limited time I had. Because of this time crunch, I could neither make any topic-wise notes nor opt for any test series. I learnt how to write good answers from the book Anthropology Simplified by Vivek Bhasme. Most of the diagrams I practised too were from this book.

Online Resources for Paper I and II

  1. Khan Academy – https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6gUY5NoX1Lk
  2. Anthropological Theories: http://anthropology.ua.edu/cultures/cultures.php
  3. Genetics: http://learn.genetics.utah.edu/
  4. Anthropological Survey of India: https://ansi.gov.in/
  5. Ministry of Tribal Affairs: https://tribal.nic.in/
  6. Tribal faces of India- https://tribal.nic.in/DivisionsFiles/tribalFaces.pdf
  7. Govt. schemes and tribal related news reported in newspapers
  8. Diagrams related to anthropology: I practised many diagrams from the notes of Kirthi Chekuri (AIR 14, CSE 2015) published in this Insights article
  9. Physical Anthropology slides

Books for general reading

The following books have absolutely no bearing on Anthropology optional preparation. But for a curious student of this subject, these books are incredibly fascinating to read. Much ahead of me choosing Anthropology as my optional, it’s these books that got me deeply interested in the fields of evolutionary biology and genetics. Pick them up in your leisure time and I hope you enjoy reading them as much as I did.

  1. Sapiens – Yuval Noah Harari
  2. The Selfish Gene- Richard Dawkins
  3. The Blind Watchmaker- Richard Dawkins
  4. The Gene- Siddhartha Mukherjee

Anthropologist Jane Goodall with our Chimp cousin. This NatGeo film on her life is fantastic.   Image credit: www.neverapart.com

Basic Plan

While you refer to the aforementioned booklist, these are some of the tips you should keep in mind.

  1. If you are a complete beginner in Anthropology, your focus must be on gaining conceptual clarity and not on quickly completing the syllabus. Always remember that on the final day, it’s your clear understanding of the subject that lets you write good answers.
  2. In the booklist I mentioned, there’s no need to read every book from cover to cover. When you are reading from a book, always have the relevant syllabus chapter/ topic and previous years’ questions in mind. They will help you to stay focussed and will give you an idea of how much to study from each book.
  3. For absolute beginners, Ember and Ember is a great book to start with. When I began preparing for Anthro in Jan 2017, I started with this book. I loved it so much that I read it cover to cover, even though such detailed reading is not at all needed from the exam point of view.
  4. If you are making notes, they must be rich and comprehensive in content. For this, start with one standard core book, make notes from it and then add relevant content from other books. I’ve dealt with this in detail in my subsequent posts to this article.
  5. For both the papers, wherever relevant, quoting examples and illustrating with diagrams is absolutely pivotal. Paper I must have tribes names from the rest of the world. Ember and Ember is rich resource for many such examples but the pity is that there’s no way to memorise them except by rote. Collect such examples in an A4 sheet and revise over and over.
  6. Attempt as many Physical Anthropology questions as possible. They are largely static with immense scope for diagrams. You shouldn’t go wrong on those.
  7. Use internet and YouTube extensively for understanding Physical Anthropology concepts (especially Genetics). You can find very good explainer videos and documentaries. In your answers, wherever relevant, you can also write about the latest findings in the field. For example, in a topic like genetic inheritance, briefly mention about current research in epigenome, DNA methylation and how it affects gene expression.
  8. Answer like a specialist. Definitions, introductions, criticisms must be scholarly. That is, you must mention Anthropologists’ name, their work (year of publication too, if you can), its criticism by other thinkers. Examples: a. Bronislaw Malinowski in his work “Argonauts of the Western Pacific (1922)” describes the importance of Kula Ring in the economic systems of Trobriand Islanders b. Franz Boas in his article “The Limitation of the Comparative Method of Anthropology (1896)” criticized the evolutionary approach and laid the foundations of Historical Particularism.
  9. For a particular concept, apart from the main thinker, try and quote works of other Anthropologists as well. For example: In Tribe-Caste Continuum of Paper II, everyone writes about Bailey, but if you can also substantiate your answer with works of Surajit Sinha on Maria Gonds, this will give your answer an edge.
  10. Use internet and newspapers to collect good case studies to illustrate Tribal problems. Cram latest statistics pertaining to them. A thorough reading of Xaxa report is an absolute must for Tribal related portions of the syllabus.
  11. Keep tabs on the latest news pertaining to Anthropology. It can be a new fossil discovery, launch of a new govt scheme for PVTGs, or a new finding in genetic research etc. When you read papers, have an eye out for such news and collect them in a separate notebook so that you can revise them before the exam.
  12. Apart from reading books, dedicate adequate time to practise diagrams and label them correctly. Consistent practice helps you draw fast and draw neat.

Anthropology is a terrific subject to learn. If you put your heart into it, you can easily ace this optional. My best wishes.

Note: My book, Fundamentals of Essay and Answer Writing is an Amazon bestseller. Since its release, the book helped countless candidates master the art of crafting exceptional essays and answers and elevate their performance in the UPSC Mains Exam. You can know about the book here.

Anudeep Durishetty

View Comments

  • Congratulations Anudeep :)

    your article was quite interesting and covered a lot of my doubts \ questions, esp where should i start reading from.

    This will be my first attempt. I just started preparation without coaching. so, i don't really know about how good are coaching materials. I am assuming they would cover everything in the syllabus as they are specifically designed for UPSC. A lot of toppers refer to various institutes coaching material

    Why would one need different coaching materials [Various Books are fine but materials!!]
    So, can you please let me know if its just to clear concepts or for case studies or is there any other reason? i want to buy Brain tree material

    i am a science student fascinated by Anthropology. Still thought Pub ad will help me [without really looking at anthro.. Was only driven by which optional will help me cover considerable mains syllabus]
    i even bought all the pub ad books :-D. could not figure out what was bothering me after reading
    a little.
    Your blog answered what was putting me off about pub ad

    • Hi Anudeep,

      I read your other articles on Anthropology. Your articles are amazing. Simple and detailed coverage. I wonder how long you took :) thank you very much.

      I have a few more questions today.
      1. Did you buy the brain tree material from Amazon? They don't have it on their website [which is unlikely though]
      2. Brain tree is a coaching material - Anthropology simplified is a "For UPSC in Q & A format". From you articles what i understood is Brain tree is for concepts in paper II. Anthropology Simplified is for diagrams in Paper I and a few concepts in paper II. please correct me if there is more to it.

      3. i was always a text book reader, no question banks - that's the reason behind these similar kind of questions. - Do you suggest reading relevant topics from a book and building on it from other books during second revision\ answer writing Or Read each topic from all the books - make your own notes and revise!!

  • Sir I have given some anthropology tests but not able to decipher issues in my answer writing though the content is fine... How did you improve upon it by yourself ?

  • Congratulations sir, as a graduate in medical science but no idea of anthropology at all... Do I hav the time to manage it if I take it as an optional for the 2019 exams?

  • Sir, may I know why did you want to become an IAS officer? Which inspired you to work as so..?

  • Hi sir,,,
    What should be the order ( section-wise) for traversing through the whole syllabus ?
    Especially for Paper-1 where UPSC mandated syllabus has Physical anthropology split in silos sec.1.4-1.7 & 9.1-12....is it ok to read similar sections at one go ?

  • Hello Sir.
    I am doing my Master;s in Zoology but still find it enormous to complete. I am thinking of switching to Anthropology for my maiden attempt in 2020, because of slight overlap with Zoology (evolution, genetics, etc.) and also because of my genuine interest in the subject.. Can you please tell me if it is able to completely and conceptually understand this subject with only self study? I can manage 4 hours per day for optional, how much time will it take to complete the syllabus?
    Thanks. :)

  • Thanks Anudeep. Do you think it is feasible for a law grad (with humanities in 10+2) to take up anthropology as an optional? I want to know the extent of "sciencey" i.e. biology knowledge required, and can keeping an open mind and regular effort make up for the (thus far) lack of it? Thanks!

    • Pick up Ember and Ember and read it for a week. You will be able to tell if you like the subject and whether you can take it up as optional.

      Anthropology need only absolute basics in biology. You need not fear it. In fact vast portion of the subject has little to do with biology. So do the exercise I suggested for a week. If your gut feeling says you can do it, then go ahead.

      • Sir, Can you please share a link for Ember and Ember book in Amazon or flipkart I can't get that book..

  • sir any coaching classes for anthropology you please suggest me sir..
    i am confused which one to join..
    some is saying vijetha others saying sapiens.. some saying vaid sir..???

    • Have you joined Vijetha ? If yes then whats your review ? I am also thinking to join .
      Thanks

  • TQ bro I have texted u abt this so many time but I didn't get replay from so I quit texting u but thanks for all information abt ALLL abt exam TQ TQ

  • Sir, don't think me as wrong. If u can do, please give the syllabus micro topics. Thank you Sir

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