Abstract
This article defines the anthropological journey as a journey undertaken by a traveler to another place, away from his home country, for scientific, religious, touristic, commercial, exploratory, or pilgrimage purposes. Through contact with the host country, the traveler observes different societies, peoples, and political systems, collects information, and records it in the form of a travel text or descriptive literary, scientific, or historical reports. The study explains that this type of journey focuses on social, political, economic, cultural, scientific, literary, and civilizational dimensions, with particular attention to customs, traditions, norms, laws, rituals, language, architecture, clothing, folklore, literature, arts, values, and everyday life.
Recommended Citation
Hamdaoui, Jamil
(2025)
"The Anthropological Journey,"
Soroud: The journal of Literacy Criticism: Vol. 8:
Iss.
1, Article 16.
Available at:
https://scholarhub.univh2c.ma/soroud/vol8/iss1/16