Autor: Henrika Kuklick
Wydawca: Wiley
Dostępność: 3-6 tygodni
Cena: 255,15 zł
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ISBN13: |
9780631226000 |
ISBN10: |
0631226001 |
Autor: |
Henrika Kuklick |
Oprawa: |
Paperback |
Rok Wydania: |
2007-12-11 |
Ilość stron: |
418 |
Wymiary: |
242x170 |
Tematy: |
JBK |
With a breadth and depth that no single–authored source could provide, A New History of Anthropology collects original writings from pre–eminent scholars in the field, to create the most complete and comprehensive book of its kind.
Situating ideas and practices within the context of their time and place of origin, A New History of Anthropology begins with an examination of the prehistory of the field, during the ′age of exploration′. The volume then continues its evaluation by examining the various anthropological traditions present in the field’s early work, discussing the numerous topical issues that arose in the field as it evolved, and looking into anthropology’s future by considering its relationship with other disciplines and its own disputed history, all through the lens of a new global perspective.
Sophisticated but accessible, A New History of Anthropology is an ideal tool for both the teaching and learning of the history of anthropology.
Spis treści:
List of Illustrations.
Notes on Contributors.
Introduction: Henrika Kuklick (University of Pennsylvania).
1. Anthropology before Anthropology: Harry Liebersohn (University of Illinois, Urbana–Champaign).
Major Traditions.
2. North American Traditions in Anthropology: The Historiographic Baseline: Regna Darnell (University of Western Ontario).
3. The British Tradition: Henrika Kuklick (University of Pennsylvania).
4. Traditions in the German Language: H. Glenn Penny (University of Iowa).
5. The Metamorphosis of Ethnology in France, 1839–1930: Emmanuelle Sibeud (University of Paris VIII).
Early Obsessions.
6. The Spiritual Dimension: Ivan Strenski (University of California, Riverside).
7. The Empire in Empiricism: The Polemics of Color: Barbara Saunders (University of Leuven).
8. Anthropology and the Classics: Robert Ackerman (Clare Hall, University of Cambridge).<
br>Neglected Pasts.
9. Anthropology on the Periphery: The Early Schools of Nordic Anthropology: Christer Lindberg (Lund University and Turku University).
10. Colonial Commerce and Anthropological Knowledge: Dutch Ethnographic Museums in the European Context: Donna C. Mehos (Eindhoven Technical University).
11. Political Fieldwork, Ethnographic Exile, and State Theory: Peasant Socialism and Anthropology in Late–Nineteenth–Century Russia: Nikolai Ssorin–Chaikov (University of Cambridge).
12. Using the Past to Serve the Peasant: Chinese Archaeology and the Making of a Historical Science: Hilary A. Smith (University of Pennsylvania).
Biology.
13. The Anthropology of Race Across the Darwinian Revolution: Thomas F. Glick (Boston University).
14. Race across the Physical–Cultural Divide in American Anthropology: Jonathan Marks (University of North Carolina, Charlotte).
15. Temporality as Artifact in Paleoanthropology: How New Ideas of Race, Brutality, Molecular Drift, and the Powers of Time Have Affected Conceptions of Human Origins: Robert N. Proctor (Stanford University).
New Directions and Perspectives.
16. Women in the Field in the Twentieth Century: Revolution, Involution, Devolution?: Lyn Schumaker (University of Manchester).
17. Visual Anthropology: Anna Grimshaw (Emory University).
18. Anthropological Regionalism: Rena Lederman (Princeton University).
19. Applied Anthropology: Merrill Singer (Yale University).
Works Cited.
Index
Nota biograficzna:
Henrika Kuklick is Professor in the Department of History & Sociology of Science at the University of Pennsylvania. She is the author of several books and numerous articles on the history of anthropology. She is a member of the American Anthropological Association, the History of Science Society, and has served on the editorial Boards of such journals as History of Anthropology; Histories of Anthro
pology; Isis, the journal of the History of Science Society; and the Journal of the History of the Behavioral Sciences. She has also served as the editor for Knowledge and Society, and is currently the editor of the History of Anthropology Newsletter.
Okładka tylna:
With a breadth and depth that no single–authored source could provide, A New History of Anthropology collects original writings from pre–eminent scholars in the field, to create the most complete and comprehensive book of its kind.
Situating ideas and practices within the context of their time and place of origin, A New History of Anthropology begins with an examination of the prehistory of the field, during the ′age of exploration′. The volume then continues its evaluation by examining the various anthropological traditions present in the field’s early work, discussing the numerous topical issues that arose in the field as it evolved, and looking into anthropology’s future by considering its relationship with other disciplines and its own disputed history, all through the lens of a new global perspective.
Sophisticated but accessible, A New History of Anthropology is an ideal tool for both the teaching and learning of the history of anthropology.
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