History and Theory in Anthropology

Höfundur Alan Barnard

Útgefandi Cambridge University Press

Snið Page Fidelity

Print ISBN 9780521773331

Útgáfa 1

Útgáfuár

5.690 kr.

Description

Efnisyfirlit

  • Half-title
  • Title
  • Copyright
  • Dedication
  • Contents
  • Figures
  • Tables
  • Preface
  • 1 Visions of anthropology
  • Anthropology and ethnology
  • The ‘four fields’ approach
  • Theory and ethnography
  • Anthropological paradigms
  • The notion of a ‘paradigm’
  • Diachronic, synchronic, and interactive perspectives
  • Society and culture
  • Visions of the history of anthropology
  • Concluding summary
  • FURTHER READING
  • 2 Precursors of the anthropological tradition
  • Natural law and the social contract
  • The seventeenth century
  • The eighteenth century
  • Definitions of humanity in eighteenth-century Europe
  • Feral children
  • The Orang Outang
  • Notions of the ‘Savage’
  • Sociological and anthropological thought
  • The sociological tradition
  • Polygenesis and monogenesis
  • Concluding summary
  • FURTHER READING
  • 3 Changing perspectives on evolution
  • Biological and anthropological traditions
  • Unilinear evolutionism
  • Maine, Lubbock, and Morgan
  • Matrilineality versus patrilineality
  • Theories of ‘totemism’
  • Tylor and Frazer on ‘early’ religion
  • Universal evolutionism
  • V. Gordon Childe
  • Leslie A. White
  • Multilinear evolutionism and cultural ecology
  • Julian H. Steward
  • George Peter Murdock
  • Neo-Darwinism
  • Sociobiology
  • The symbolic revolution?
  • Current trends
  • Concluding summary
  • FURTHER READING
  • 4 Diffusionist and culture-area theories
  • Antecedents of diffusionism: philology, Müller, and Bastian
  • The philological tradition: diffusionism before the diffusionists?
  • Diffusionism proper
  • German-Austrian diffusionism
  • British diffusionism
  • Diffusionism today?
  • Culture-area and regional approaches
  • The culture-area approach in American anthropology
  • Regional comparison, national traditions, and regional traditions
  • Concluding summary
  • FURTHER READING
  • 5 Functionalism and structural-functionalism
  • Evolutionist precursors and the organic analogy
  • Durkheimian sociology
  • The functionalism of Malinowski
  • Functionalism and fieldwork
  • A scientific theory of culture?
  • The structural-functionalism of Radcliffe-Brown
  • A natural science of society?
  • Function, structure, and structural form
  • Semantic structure or social structure?
  • Two theories of totemism
  • The influence of Malinowski and Radcliffe-Brown
  • Concluding summary
  • FURTHER READING
  • 6 Action-centred, processual, and Marxist perspectives
  • Action-centred and processual approaches
  • Roots in sociology
  • Roots in anthropology
  • Transactionalism
  • The Manchester School
  • Marxist approaches
  • Key concepts in Marxist anthropology
  • The structural Marxism of Godelier
  • The ‘land and labour’ Marxism of Meillassoux
  • Political economy and globalization theory
  • Three ethnographic debates
  • Friedman versus Leach: the political economy of the Kachin
  • Wilmsen versus Lee: Kalahari history and ethnography
  • Obeyesekere versus Sahlins: the death of Captain Cook
  • Concluding summary
  • FURTHER READING
  • 7 From relativism to cognitive science
  • Franz Boas and the rise of cultural relativism
  • Culture and personality
  • Primitive thought?
  • The anti-relativism of Lévy-Bruhl
  • The linguistic relativism of Whorf
  • Criticisms of Whorfianism
  • The rationality debate
  • Towards cognitive science
  • Structural semantics
  • Cognitive anthropology
  • Ethnoscience
  • Concluding summary
  • FURTHER READING
  • 8 Structuralism, from linguistics to anthropology
  • Saussure and structural linguistics
  • Saussure and his ‘Course’
  • Four key distinctions
  • After Saussure
  • Lévi-Strauss and structural anthropology
  • Structuralism, pattern, and ideas
  • Elementary structures of kinship
  • The culinary triangle
  • The Oedipus myth
  • Structuralism and national traditions of anthropology
  • Concludin summary
  • FURTHER READING
  • 9 Poststructuralists, feminists, and (other) mavericks
  • Poststructuralism and anthropology
  • Derrida, Althusser, and Lacan
  • Bourdieu’s practice theory
  • Foucault’s theory of knowledge and power
  • Feminism in anthropology
  • From gender studies to feminist anthropology
  • Gender as a symbolic construction
  • Gender as a complex set of social relations
  • Embodiment
  • Two maverick eclectics
  • Structure and conflict: Bateson on national character
  • Structure and action: Douglas on grid and group
  • Concluding summary
  • FURTHER READING
  • 10 Interpretive and postmodernist approaches
  • Evans-Pritchard’s interpretive approach
  • Geertz’s interpretivism
  • Concepts of changing times
  • Reflexivity and reflexivism
  • Orientalism, occidentalism, and globalization
  • Postmodernism and postmodern anthropology
  • The return to relativism
  • ‘Writing culture’
  • Problems with postmodernism
  • Mixed approaches: towards a compromise?
  • Concluding summary
  • FURTHER READING
  • 11 Conclusions
  • National traditions and the future of anthropological theory
  • Further thoughts on histories of anthropology
  • Concluding summary
  • Appendix 1 Dates of birth and death of individuals mentioned in the text
  • Appendix 2 Glossary
  • References
  • Index

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