Anthropologist are in a funk these days: other fields, such as history and literary studies, are having a heyday with concepts anthropologists developed but have since discredited, and postmodernists just jeer at what they actually do believe in. Ten essays suggest remedies such as throwing everything out and starting over, limiting their study to the American middle-class, and undertaking an "archaeology" (or perhaps psychoanalysis) of the discipline. Paper edition (unseen), $15.95. Annotation copyright Book News, Inc. Portland, Or.
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Richard G. Fox is President Emeritus, Wenner-Gren Foundation and an Adjunct Professor, Department of Anthropology, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill.
[Recapturing Anthropology is] a first class ticket to new times in anthropology. --Roger Slack, Sociology Vol. 27, no. 4 (November 1993)
Product of a 1989 seminar of leading ethnologists, these nine essays explore the revitalization of contemporary anthropology in response to postmodern criticism . . . [T]his will interest those concerned with new directions in the social sciences. For faculty and students in departments of anthropology, for larger public libraries, and essential for university libraries associated with both undergraduate and graduate programs in the social sciences. --R.B. Clay, Choice (September 1992)
The studies in this volume offer new and original work that will help develop research agendas in this important, emergent field. --Jacqueline Urla, University of Massachusetts
Product of a 1989 seminar of leading ethnologists, these nine essays explore the revitalization of contemporary anthropology in response to postmodern criticism... [T]his will interest those concerned with new directions in the social sciences. For faculty and students in departments of anthropology, for larger public libraries, and essential for university libraries associated with both undergraduate and graduate programs in the social sciences. --R.B. Clay, Choice (September 1992)
The studies in this volume offer new and original work that will help develop research agendas in this important, emergent field. --Jacqueline Urla, University of Massachusetts
Product of a 1989 seminar of leading ethnologists, these nine essays explore the revitalization of contemporary anthropology in response to postmodern criticism... [T]his will interest those concerned with new directions in the social sciences. For faculty and students in departments of anthropology, for larger public libraries, and essential for university libraries associated with both undergraduate and graduate programs in the social sciences. --R.B. Clay, Choice (September 1992)
The studies in this volume offer new and original work that will help develop research agendas in this important, emergent field. --Jacqueline Urla, University of Massachusetts
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