A Social and Political History
De som köpt den här boken har ofta också köpt Who's Afraid of Gender? av Judith Butler (inbunden).
Köp båda 2 för 869 krPraise for the first edition: "Moberg does a masterful job of weaving together historical context, anthropological theory, and present-day issues and sensibilities. Rather than standing at a critical distance and taking potshots at our disciplinary ancestors, Moberg shows students clearly how anthropologys ideas and theoretical stances have arisen out of, and made sense within, their historical and geographical contexts. His style is engaging, readable, and often laugh-out-loud funny. How often can one say that about a theory textbook?" Julie Adkins, University of Texas at Arlington, USA "While other textbooks on anthropological theory give token accounts of the socio-political influences and historical contexts that produced ruling ideas on the nature of society and the origins of cultural diversity, these processes are the central focus of Mobergs unique analysis. Moving beyond biographical sketches and historical vignettes, the book is a lively exploration of how paradigms and politics of the past and present inform anthropological thought." William L. Alexander, University of North Carolina Wilmington, USA
Mark Moberg is Professor of Anthropology at the University of South Alabama, USA, and has many years of experience teaching anthropological theory. His other books include Slipping Away: Banana Politics and Fair Trade in the Eastern Caribbean (2008).
1. Of Politics and Paradigms 2. Claims and Critiques of Anthropological Knowledge 3. Anthropology before Anthropologists 4. Theory and Practice to Change the World 5. Heirs to Order and Progress 6. Spencer, Darwin, and some Evolutionary Tales for our Time 7. The Boasian Revolution 8. Culture and Psychology 9. Functionalism, the Pure and the Hyphenated 10. Anti-Structure and the Collapse of Empire 11. Evolution Redux 12. Contemporary Materialist and Ecological Approaches 13. Symbols, Structures, and the Web of Significance 14. Postmodern Political Economy and Sensibilities 15. The Contemporary Anthropological Moment