Textbook
New History of AnthropologyISBN: 978-0-631-22600-0
Paperback
418 pages
November 2007, ©2007, Wiley-Blackwell
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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).
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