<p>If you remove the space after the dot and put the following into your browser, you will get a pretty entertaining film about two linguistics academics engaged in documenting and preserving endangered languages on several continents:</p>
<p><a href=“http://www”>www</a>. Everything You Need to Know About Babelgum + Top 5 Alternatives The Linguists</p>
<p>Note that these guys (one of whom is a professor at Swarthmore, the other a PhD from Chicago) don’t call themselves Linguistic Anthropologists. They (and others like them) would call themselves Morphologists/Phonologists. But someone who is attracted by the idea of Linguistic Anthropology might find something like this as or more interesting. (They get compared to Indiana Jones a lot, something that embarasses them.) Another example is at the University of Toronto, where the founder and Chair of the Aboriginal Studies Program is a Linguistics professor. If you limit yourself to a particular label like Linguistic Anthropology or Ethnolinguistics, you can miss a lot of interesting stuff.</p>