A History of AnthropologyThis is the first book to cover the entire history of social and cultural anthropology in a single volume. Beginning with a summary of the discipline in the nineteenth century, exploring major figures such as Morgan and Tylor, it goes on to provide a comprehensive overview of the discipline in the twentieth century.The bulk of the book is devoted to themes and controversies characteristic of post First World War anthropology, from structural functionalism via structuralism to hermeneutics, cultural ecology, discourse analysis and, most recently, globalization and postmodernism. The authors emphasise throughout the need to see changes in the discipline in a wider social, political and intellectual context. This is a timely, concise history of a major discipline, in an engaging and thought-provoking narrative, that will appeal to students of anthropology worldwide. |
From inside the book
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Page 38
... seemed to be the case at mid - century , when American anthropology had diverged out into many specialised strands and Mauss's students had not yet made their mark . British ' kin- shipology ( Chapters 4 and 5 ) seemed , in contrast ...
... seemed to be the case at mid - century , when American anthropology had diverged out into many specialised strands and Mauss's students had not yet made their mark . British ' kin- shipology ( Chapters 4 and 5 ) seemed , in contrast ...
Page 145
... seemed more and more relevant for many young anthropologists , while synchronic , single - society studies increasingly seemed outdated and politically incorrect ( Chapter 9 ) . Finally , the orientalism debate stimulated attempts to ...
... seemed more and more relevant for many young anthropologists , while synchronic , single - society studies increasingly seemed outdated and politically incorrect ( Chapter 9 ) . Finally , the orientalism debate stimulated attempts to ...
Page 155
... seemed increasingly relevant . And due to the excessive violence of many nationalist movements , it seemed natural for some nationalism scholars to contribute to studies of the effects of violence ( as in medical anthropology ; see ...
... seemed increasingly relevant . And due to the excessive violence of many nationalist movements , it seemed natural for some nationalism scholars to contribute to studies of the effects of violence ( as in medical anthropology ; see ...
Contents
Victorians Germans and a Frenchman | 16 |
Four Founding Fathers | 36 |
Expansion and Institutionalisation | 54 |
Copyright | |
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academic Africa American anthropology anthro anthropol argued Audrey Richards Azande Barth Bastian Bateson Benedict Boas Boas's Boasian Britain British anthropology Cambridge century Chapter Chicago cognitive colonial complex concept concerned critique cultural anthropology cultural ecology cultural relativism debate decades developed diffusionism discipline Durkheim Durkheimian economic economic anthropology empirical ethnicity ethnographic Europe European Evans-Pritchard evolution evolutionism evolutionist fieldwork Firth French functionalism Geertz German global globalisation Gluckman human idea important increasingly individual influence influential inspired institutions integrated intellectual interest kinship Kroeber language later Leach Lévi-Strauss Malinowski Marx Marxist Mauss Mead medical anthropology methodological methodological individualism models modern monograph Morgan movement Nuer organisation peasant philosopher political pology postmodern postmodernist problem published Radcliffe-Brown relationship ritual Sahlins seemed social anthropology social structure society sociobiology sociologists sociology Steward structural Marxist structural-functionalism studies symbolic theoretical theorist theory traditions Turner Tylor University Weber