About the Author:
H. Glenn Penny is Assistant Professor of History, University of Missouri–Kansas City. Matti Bunzl is Aaron and Robin Fischer Assistant Professor of Jewish Culture and Society, Department of Anthropology, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
Review:
"By examining the German anthropological tradition, this volume brings back into focus an important national tradition in the construction of modern ethnology, and it does so in a way that illuminates the larger themes of academic professionalism, colonialism, the construction of race, and the idea of empire."
—Helmut Smith, Vanderbilt University
(Helmut Smith, Vanderbilt University 2003-01-29)
"No other book covers the history of German anthropology, colonialism, travel, and exoticism so well—both coherently and controversially."
—Lora Wildenthal, Texas A & M University
(Lora Wildenthal, Texas A & M University 2003-01-29)
"This is an admirable collection, in part because of the uniformly high quality of the contributions, the success of the editors in making the connections between the individual pieces clear, and the fact that it announces the coming of age of a field of study. It also shows that scholars doing modern German cultural history have important things to say about topics of great contemporary significance."
—Central European History
(Woodruff D. Smith, Univ of Massachusetts, Boston Central European History 2005-11-22)
"Thought-provoking and well-written, the essays examine the influential roles of journals, museum directors, collectors, scholars, and field anthropologists in the colonies."
—Choice
(E. L. Turk, emerita, Indiana University East Choice 2004-04-05)
"In the past several years we have witnessed the beginnings of a revolution in scholarship on German anthropology of the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. This revolution is due in no small part to the previous work of the editors of and contributors to Worldly Provincialism. The present anthology will serve as a valuable resource for classroom debates and as a battle plan for those slightly behind in appreciating the recent call to arms."
—German Studies Review
(Thomas O. Haakenson, Univ of Minnesota German Studies Review 2005-06-17)
". . . succeeds in formulating for the first time numerous areas of inquiry that will be essential for future scholars in this area. . . . The significance of German anthropology over the entire period of its development, from its beginnings in Renaissance humanism to its decline under German fascism, cannot be overestimated. Without the theoretical contributions of German anthropologists, the modern cultural sciences would have to do without a great portion of their analytical vocabulary. This collective volume takes a first step toward a comprehensive history of the discipline. . . ."
—H-Net Reviews in the Humanities & Social Sciences
(Hartmut Krech, Bremen H-Net Reviews in the Humanities & Social Sciences 2005-06-17)
"About this title" may belong to another edition of this title.