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Readings for a History of Anthropological Theory, Fourth Edition PDF

968 Pages·2013·4.09 MB·English
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Readings for A History of Anthropological Theory READINGS FOR A HISTORY of ANTHROPOLOGICAL THEORY FOURTH EDITION edited by Paul A. Erickson & Liam D. Murphy Copyright © University of Toronto Press Incorporated 2013 Higher Education Division www.utppublishing.com All rights reserved. The use of any part of this publication reproduced, transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, or stored in a retrieval system, without prior written consent of the publisher—or in the case of photocopying, a licence from Access Copyright (Canadian Copyright Licensing Agency), One Yonge Street, Suite 1900, Toronto, Ontario M5E 1E5—is an infringement of the copyright law. Library and Archives Canada Cataloguing in Publication Readings for a history of anthropological theory / edited by Paul A. Erickson & Liam D. Murphy. — 4th ed. Includes bibliographical references. Issued also in electronic formats. ISBN 978-1-4426-0656-2 (pbk.)—ISBN 978-1-4426-0768-2 (bound) 1. Anthropology—Philosophy. 2. Anthropology—History. I. Erickson, Paul A II. Murphy, Liam Donat GN33.E74 2013 Suppl. 301.01 C2012-908013-6 We welcome comments and suggestions regarding any aspect of our publications —please feel free to contact us at [email protected] or visit our Internet site at www.utppublishing.com. North America 5201 Dufferin Street North York, Ontario, Canada, M3H 5T8 2250 Military Road Tonawanda, New York, USA, 14150 ORDERS PHONE: 1–800–565–9523 ORDERS FAX: 1–800–221–9985 ORDERS E-MAIL: [email protected] UK, Ireland, and continental Europe NBN International Estover Road, Plymouth, PL6 7PY, UK ORDERS PHONE: 44 (0) 1752 202301 ORDERS FAX: 44 (0) 1752 202333 ORDERS E-MAIL: [email protected] Every effort has been made to contact copyright holders; in the event of an error or omission, please notify the publisher. The University of Toronto Press acknowledges the financial support for its publishing activities of the Government of Canada through the Canada Book Fund. Printed in Canada For Dawn For Siobhan Contents Preface Introduction PART ONE THE EARLY HISTORY OF ANTHROPOLOGICAL THEORY Overview 1. Bourgeois and Proletarians KARL MARX AND FRIEDRICH ENGELS 2. The Science of Culture EDWARD BURNETT TYLOR 3. Ethnical Periods LEWIS HENRY MORGAN 4. The Organic Analogy Reconsidered HERBERT SPENCER 5. General Summary and Conclusion [The Descent of Man] CHARLES DARWIN 6. [Part] III [Civilization and Its Discontents] SIGMUND FREUD 7. Introduction [The Elementary Forms of the Religious Life] ÉMILE DURKHEIM 8. The Sociology of Charismatic Authority MAX WEBER 9. Nature of the Linguistic Sign and Synchronic and Diachronic Law FERDINAND DE SAUSSURE PART TWO THE EARLIER TWENTIETH CENTURY Overview 10. The Methods of Ethnology FRANZ BOAS 11. Conclusion [Primitive Society] ROBERT LOWIE 12. What Anthropology Is About ALFRED LOUIS KROEBER 13. Introduction [Coming of Age in Samoa] MARGARET MEAD 14. The Individual and the Pattern of Culture RUTH BENEDICT 15. Structuralism and Ecology CLAUDE LÉVI-STRAUSS 16. Structuralism in Social Anthropology EDMUND LEACH 17. Introduction [Islands of History] MARSHALL SAHLINS 18. Social Structure ALFRED REGINALD RADCLIFFE-BROWN 19. The Subject, Method, and Scope of This Inquiry [Argonauts of the Western Pacific] BRONISLAW MALINOWSKI 20. Rituals of Rebellion in South-East Africa MAX GLUCKMAN PART THREE THE LATER TWENTIETH CENTURY Overview 21. The Unconscious Patterning of Behavior in Society EDWARD SAPIR 22. Energy and Tools LESLIE WHITE 23. The Epistemology of Cultural Materialism MARVIN HARRIS 24. Symbols in Ndembu Ritual VICTOR TURNER 25. Thick Description: Toward an Interpretive Theory of Culture CLIFFORD GEERTZ 26. Woman the Gatherer: Male Bias in Anthropology SALLY SLOCUM 27. Language, Gender, and Power: An Anthropological Review SUSAN GAL 28. Knowing the Oriental EDWARD W. SAID 29. Globalization and Postcolonial States AKHIL GUPTA AND ARADHANA SHARMA 30. Introduction [Europe and the People Without History] ERIC R. WOLF 31. The Birth of the Asylum MICHEL FOUCAULT 32. The Production and Reproduction of Legitimate Language PIERRE BOURDIEU 33. Partial Truths JAMES CLIFFORD 34. A Crisis of Representation in the Human Sciences GEORGE E. MARCUS AND MICHAEL M.J. FISCHER 35. Theory in Anthropology since the Sixties SHERRY B. ORTNER 36. A Critical-Interpretive Approach in Medical Anthropology: Rituals and Routines of Discipline and Dissent MARGARET LOCK AND NANCY SCHEPER-HUGHES PART FOUR THE EARLY TWENTY-FIRST CENTURY Overview 37. Disjuncture and Difference in the Global Cultural Economy ARJUN APPADURAI 38. Developments in US Anthropology since the 1980s, a Supplement: The Reality of Center-Margin Relations, To Be Sure, but Changing (and Hopeful) Affinities in These Relations GEORGE E. MARCUS 39. Anthropology and The Bell Curve JONATHAN MARKS 40. Counterinsurgency as a Cultural System DAVID B. EDWARDS 41. Introduction [Other People’s Anthropologies] ALEXANDAR BOŠKOVIĆC AND THOMAS HYLLAND ERIKSEN Conclusion Glossary Sources Preface This fourth edition of Readings for a History of Anthropological Theory reflects the editors’ shared views on the history of anthropological theory. While we do not, and in fact could not, concur with the views of all the anthropologists and theorists we have cited or included as authors, we consider them sufficiently important and influential to warrant the characterizations they receive in this book. We have conceived the book as a resource for teaching upper-level undergraduate or graduate university courses in the history of anthropology, anthropological theory, or the history of anthropological theory. Many users of the first three editions of the book found them to be useful companions to our textbook A History of Anthropological Theory, now also available in a fourth edition. The order of presentation of theorists in the two books is the same, as is a new grouping of theorists into four parts, including a fourth part on early- twenty-first-century theory, each part with a revised introductory overview. In this edition, we have omitted four selections: “Introduction [African Political Systems]” by Meyer Fortes and Edward Evan Evans-Pritchard; “Self- Interest and the Social Good: Some Implications of Hagen Gender Imagery” by Marilyn Strathern; “Are There Histories of Peoples Without Europe? A Review Article” by Talal Asad; and “Sex on the Brain” by Stefan Helmreich and Heather Paxson. At the same time, we have added five selections: “Woman the Gatherer: Male Bias in Anthropology” by Sally Slocum; “Globalization and Postcolonial States” by Akhil Gupta and Aradhana Sharma; “Developments in US Anthropology since the 1980s, a Supplement: The Reality of Center-Margin Relations, To be Sure, but Changing (and Hopeful) Affinities in These Relations” by George Marcus; “Counterinsurgency as a Cultural System” by David B. Edwards; and “Introduction [Other People’s Anthropologies]” by Alexandar Bošković and Thomas Hylland Eriksen. The result is a net increase of one selection, for a total of 41 selections, altogether more weighted toward contemporary theory. Accompanying these changes are revisions to the Introduction and Conclusion, the addition of a new section on world traditions in anthropology, expanded sections on political economy and postcolonial theory and on public anthropology, and updated lists of suggested further readings. In addition to these changes, in this edition we have added at the beginning of

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This comprehensive anthology offers over 40 readings that are critical to the understanding of anthropological theory and the development of anthropology as an academic discipline. The fourth edition maintains a strong focus on the .four-field. roots of the discipline in North America but has been r
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