Atjaunināt sīkdatņu piekrišanu

E-grāmata: Anthropology in Theory: Issues in Epistemology

4.07/5 (76 ratings by Goodreads)
Edited by (London School of Economics and Political Science), Edited by (University of Toronto)
  • Formāts: EPUB+DRM
  • Izdošanas datums: 16-Dec-2013
  • Izdevniecība: Wiley-Blackwell
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781118780596
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
  • Formāts - EPUB+DRM
  • Cena: 74,89 €*
  • * ši ir gala cena, t.i., netiek piemērotas nekādas papildus atlaides
  • Ielikt grozā
  • Pievienot vēlmju sarakstam
  • Šī e-grāmata paredzēta tikai personīgai lietošanai. E-grāmatas nav iespējams atgriezt un nauda par iegādātajām e-grāmatām netiek atmaksāta.
  • Formāts: EPUB+DRM
  • Izdošanas datums: 16-Dec-2013
  • Izdevniecība: Wiley-Blackwell
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781118780596
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:

DRM restrictions

  • Kopēšana (kopēt/ievietot):

    nav atļauts

  • Drukāšana:

    nav atļauts

  • Lietošana:

    Digitālo tiesību pārvaldība (Digital Rights Management (DRM))
    Izdevējs ir piegādājis šo grāmatu šifrētā veidā, kas nozīmē, ka jums ir jāinstalē bezmaksas programmatūra, lai to atbloķētu un lasītu. Lai lasītu šo e-grāmatu, jums ir jāizveido Adobe ID. Vairāk informācijas šeit. E-grāmatu var lasīt un lejupielādēt līdz 6 ierīcēm (vienam lietotājam ar vienu un to pašu Adobe ID).

    Nepieciešamā programmatūra
    Lai lasītu šo e-grāmatu mobilajā ierīcē (tālrunī vai planšetdatorā), jums būs jāinstalē šī bezmaksas lietotne: PocketBook Reader (iOS / Android)

    Lai lejupielādētu un lasītu šo e-grāmatu datorā vai Mac datorā, jums ir nepieciešamid Adobe Digital Editions (šī ir bezmaksas lietotne, kas īpaši izstrādāta e-grāmatām. Tā nav tas pats, kas Adobe Reader, kas, iespējams, jau ir jūsu datorā.)

    Jūs nevarat lasīt šo e-grāmatu, izmantojot Amazon Kindle.

This second edition of the widely praised Anthropology in Theory: Issues in Epistemology, features a variety of updates, revisions, and new readings in its comprehensive presentation of issues in the history of anthropological theory and epistemology over the past century.

  • Provides a comprehensive selection of 60 readings and an insightful overview of the evolution of anthropological theory
  • Revised and updated to reflect an on-going strength and diversity of the discipline in recent years, with new readings pointing to innovative directions in the development of anthropological research
  • Identifies crucial concepts that reflect the practice of engaging with theory, particular ways of thinking, analyzing and reflecting that are unique to anthropology
  • Includes excerpts of seminal anthropological works, key classic and contemporary debates in the discipline, and cutting-edge new theorizing
  • Reveals broader debates in the social sciences, including the relationship between society and culture; language and cultural meanings; structure and agency; identities and technologies; subjectivities and trans-locality; and meta-theory, ontology and epistemology
Notes on the Editors x
General Introduction xi
Henrietta L. Moore
Todd Sanders
Acknowledgments xvi
Anthropology and Epistemology 1(18)
Henrietta L. Moore
Todd Sanders
PART I
19(144)
Section 1 Culture and Behavior
21(1)
1 The Aims of Anthropological Research
22(10)
Franz Boas
2 The Concept of Culture in Science
32(5)
A. L. Kroeber
3 Problems and Methods of Approach
37(6)
Gregory Bateson
4 The Individual and the Pattern of Culture
43(11)
Ruth Benedict
Section 2 Structure and System
53(1)
5 Rules for the Explanation of Social Facts
54(10)
Emile Durkheim
6 On Social Structure
64(6)
A. R. Radcliffe-Brown
7 Introduction to Political Systems of Highland Burma
70(8)
E. R. Leach
8 Social Structure
78(12)
Claude Levi-Strauss
Section 3 Function and Environment
89(1)
9 The Group and the Individual in Functional Analysis
90(12)
Bronislaw Malinowski
10 The Concept and Method of Cultural Ecology
102(7)
Julian H. Steward
11 Energy and the Evolution of Culture
109(14)
Leslie A. White
12 Ecology, Cultural and Noncultural
123(7)
Andrew P. Vayda
Roy A. Rappaport
Section 4 Methods and Objects
129(1)
13 Understanding and Explanation in Social Anthropology
130(11)
J. H. M. Beattie
14 Anthropological Data and Social Reality
141(10)
Ladislav Holy
Milan Stuchlik
15 Objectification Objectified
151(12)
Pierre Bourdieu
PART II
163(120)
Section 5 Meanings as Objects of Study
165(1)
16 Thick Description: Toward an Interpretive Theory of Culture
166(7)
Clifford Geertz
17 Anthropology and the Analysis of Ideology
173(13)
Talal Asad
18 Subjectivity and Cultural Critique
186(6)
Sherry B. Ortner
Section 6 Language and Method
191(1)
19 Structural Analysis in Linguistics and in Anthropology
192(12)
Claude Levi-Strauss
20 Ordinary Language and Human Action
204(6)
Malcolm Crick
21 Language, Anthropology and Cognitive Science
210(12)
Maurice Bloch
Section 7 Cognition, Psychology, and Neuroanthropology
221(1)
22 Towards an Integration of Ethnography, History and the Cognitive Science of Religion
222(4)
Harvey Whitehouse
23 Linguistic and Cultural Variables in the Psychology of Numeracy
226(5)
Charles Stafford
24 Subjectivity
231(5)
T. M. Luhrmann
25 Why the Behavioural Sciences Need the Concept of the Culture-Ready Brain
236(10)
Charles Whitehead
Section 8 Bodies of Knowledges
245(1)
26 Knowledge of the Body
246(14)
Michael Jackson
27 The End of the Body?
260(16)
Emily Martin
28 Hybridity: Hybrid Bodies of the Scientific Imaginary
276(7)
Lesley Sharp
PART III
283(162)
Section 9 Coherence and Contingency
285(1)
29 Puritanism and the Spirit of Capitalism
286(7)
Max Weber
30 Introduction to Europe and the People Without History
293(15)
Eric R. Wolf
31 Introduction to Of Revelation and Revolution
308(14)
Jean Comaroff
John Comaroff
32 Epochal Structures I: Reconstructing Historical Materialism
322(10)
Donald L. Donham
33 Structures and the Habitus
332(12)
Pierre Bourdieu
Section 10 Universalisms and Domain Terms
343(1)
34 Body and Mind in Mind, Body and Mind in Body: Some Anthropological Interventions in a Long Conversation
344(13)
Michael Lambek
35 So Is Female to Male as Nature Is to Culture?
357(6)
Sherry B. Ortner
36 Global Anxieties: Concept-Metaphors and Pre-theoretical Commitments in Anthropology
363(15)
Henrietta L. Moore
Section 11 Perspectives and Their Logics
377(1)
37 The Rhetoric of Ethnographic Holism
378(8)
Robert J. Thornton
38 Writing Against Culture
386(14)
Lila Abu-Lughod
39 Cutting the Network
400(12)
Marilyn Strathern
Section 12 Objectivity, Morality, and Truth
411(1)
40 The Primacy of the Ethical: Propositions for a Militant Anthropology
412(7)
Nancy Scheper-Hughes
41 Moral Models in Anthropology
419(10)
Roy D'Andrade
42 Postmodernist Anthropology, Subjectivity, and Science: A Modernist Critique
429(12)
Melford E. Spiro
43 Beyond Good and Evil? Questioning the Anthropological Discomfort with Morals
441(4)
Didier Fassin
PART IV
445(131)
Section 13 The Anthropology of Western Modes of Thought
447(1)
44 The Invention of Women
448(7)
Oyeronke Oyewumi
45 Valorizing the Present: Orientalism, Postcoloniality and the Human Sciences
455(6)
Vivek Dhareshwar
46 Cosmological Deixis and Amerindian Perspectivism
461(15)
Eduardo Viveiros de Castro
Section 14 (Re)defining Objects of Inquiry
475(1)
47 What Was Life? Answers from Three Limit Biologies
476(5)
Stefan Helmreich
48 The Near and the Elsewhere
481(11)
Marc Auge
49 Relativism
492(10)
Bruno Latour
Section 15 Subjects, Objects, and Affect
501(1)
50 How to Read the Future: The Yield Curve, Affect, and Financial Prediction
502(6)
Caitlin Zaloom
51 Signs Are Not the Garb of Meaning: On the Social Analysis of Material Things
508(6)
Webb Keane
52 Affective Spaces, Melancholic Objects: Ruination and the Production of Anthropological Knowledge
514(8)
Yael Navaro-Yashin
Section 16 Imagining Methodologies and Meta-things
521(1)
53 Beyond "Culture": Space, Identity, and the Politics of Difference
522(9)
Akhil Gupta
James Ferguson
54 What is at Stake - and is not - in the Idea and Practice of Multi-sited Ethnography
531(4)
George E. Marcus
55 Grassroots Globalization and the Research Imagination
535(12)
Arjun Appadurai
56 The End of Anthropology, Again: On the Future of an In/Discipline
547(9)
John Comaroff
Section 17 Anthropologizing Ourselves
555(1)
57 Participant Objectivation
556(5)
Pierre Bourdieu
58 Anthropology of Anthropology? Further Reflections on Reflexivity
561(5)
P. Steven Sangren
59 World Anthropologies: Cosmopolitics for a New Global Scenario in Anthropology
566(5)
Gustavo Lins Ribeiro
60 Cultures of Expertise and the Management of Globalization: Toward the Re-functioning of Ethnography
571(5)
Douglas R. Holmes
George E. Marcus
Index 576
Henrietta L. Moore is the William Wyse Chair of Social Anthropology at the University of Cambridge. Her most recent book is Still Life: Hopes, Desires and Satisfactions (2011).

Todd Sanders is Associate Professor of Anthropology at the University of Toronto, and has worked in Africa for two decades. His books include Those Who Play with Fire: Gender, Fertility and Transformation in East and Southern Africa (2004) and Beyond Bodies: Rainmaking and Sense Making in Tanzania (2008).