Anthropological TheoryAnthropological theory has been much discussed in recent years, yet the crucial questions still remain--how can it be defined, how is it developed, how is it to be applied, and how can one confirm it? The editors of Anthropological Theory answer these questions by presenting essays relating to various aspects of anthropological theory. Their selections from widely scattered and often difficult-to-obtain sources present a comprehensive set of writings that describe the current position and issues involved in theory. The development of field work in anthropology generated a tremendous emphasis on empirical data and research. The plethora of information awaiting collection and the enthusiasm with which the field embraced it so immersed anthropologists that they were unable to relate this new information to the field as a whole. Manners and Kaplan believe that this lack of generalization had a profoundly negative effect upon the discipline. Therefore, they look closely into the relationship between field work and theory in an opening essay and go on to present material that demonstrates the value and the necessity of theory in anthropology. Essays by anthropologists and other social scientists deal with "explanation," evolution, ecology, ideology, structuralism, and a number of other issues reflecting throughout the editors' conviction that anthropology is a science, the goal of which is to produce generalizations about sociocultural phenomena. The book provides necessary perspective for examining and evaluating the crucial intellectual concerns of modern anthropology and will therefore be important for the work of every anthropologist. Robert A. Manners (1913-1996) received his Ph.D. from Columbia University and carried on field work in the Caribbean, among American Indians in the Southwest, and in East Africa. He wrote numerous articles and reviews for anthropological journals as well as many books. He was professor of anthropology, Brandeis University where he started up the department. David Kaplan is professor emeritus of anthropology at Brandeis University. He has contributed articles and reviews to various journals. He has also done field work in Mexico and his areas of specialty include economic anthropology, method and theory, and peasant culture of Mesoamerica. |
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Contents
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The Difficulties Achievements and Limitations of Social Anthropology | 31 |
Past and Present E E EvansPritchard | 46 |
Social Anthropology and the Method of Controlled Comparison | 54 |
On Explanation John Hospers | 69 |
The Natural Science Ideal in the Social Sciences Lewis White Beck | 80 |
Explanation and Comparative Dynamics in Social Science | 89 |
IndianEuropean Relations in Colonial Latin America | 285 |
Closed Corporate Peasant Communities in Mesoamerica | 294 |
The Influence of Linguistics on Early Culture and Personality Theory | 303 |
Personality and Social Structure Bert Kaplan | 318 |
Behavioral Evolution and the Emergence of the Self | 342 |
Cultural and Cognitive Discontinuity Ulric Neisser | 354 |
The Study of Cultural Ecology | 367 |
The Frontier in History Owen Lattimore | 374 |
The Phenomenological and Naturalistic Approaches to the Social | 97 |
An Essay | 105 |
Understanding and Explanation in Social Anthropology | 115 |
An Operational Concept | 127 |
Some Observations and Queries Li Anche | 136 |
A Chinese Phase in Social Anthropology Maurice Freedman | 145 |
Functionalism Realpolitik and Anthropology in Underdeveloped Areas | 156 |
Some Criticisms of Cultural Relativism Paul F Schmidt | 169 |
Observation and Generalization in Cultural Anthropology | 175 |
Residence Rules Ward H Goodenough | 181 |
Conflict and Congruence in Anthropological Theory | 193 |
Functional Analysis of Change Francesca Cancian | 204 |
Function and Cause Ronald Philip Dore | 212 |
On Social Structure S F Nadel | 220 |
B Evolution | 229 |
Evolution and Process Julian H Steward | 241 |
On the Evolution of Social Stratification and the State | 251 |
Language and Evolution Joseph H Greenberg | 260 |
History | 269 |
Some Issues in the Logic of Historical Analysis Ernest Nagel | 276 |
Ecologic Relations of Ethnic Groups in Swat North Pakistan | 386 |
Parallel Process in Acculturation | 393 |
Sociological Aspects of the Relation between Language and Culture | 411 |
Language Thought and Culture Paul Henle | 421 |
The Views of Benjamin Lee Whorf Max Black | 432 |
Belief and Knowledge Godfrey Lienhardt | 438 |
Social Beliefs and Individual Thinking in Tribal Society Max Gluckman | 453 |
On Norms and Values Judith Blake and Kingsley Davis | 465 |
Structuralism and Formal Analysis | 473 |
Studies in Ethnoscience William C Sturtevant | 475 |
The Psychic Unity of Human Groups Anthony F C Wallace | 500 |
The Ethnographic Study of Cognitive Systems Charles O Frake | 507 |
Gods Truth or HocusPocus? Robbins Burling | 514 |
Some Comments on Formal Analysis of Grammatical and Semantic Systems Muriel Hammer | 523 |
Structural Analysis in Linguistics and Anthropology Claude LeviStrauss | 530 |
Claude LeviStraussAnthropologist and Philosopher Edmund Leach | 541 |
On the Work of Claude LeviStrauss Clifford Geertz | 551 |
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