Notes on the Editors |
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General Introduction |
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xi | |
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Acknowledgments |
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xvi | |
Anthropology and Epistemology |
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1 | (18) |
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19 | (144) |
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Section 1 Culture and Behavior |
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21 | (1) |
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1 The Aims of Anthropological Research |
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22 | (10) |
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2 The Concept of Culture in Science |
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32 | (5) |
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3 Problems and Methods of Approach |
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37 | (6) |
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4 The Individual and the Pattern of Culture |
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43 | (11) |
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Section 2 Structure and System |
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53 | (1) |
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5 Rules for the Explanation of Social Facts |
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54 | (10) |
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64 | (6) |
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7 Introduction to Political Systems of Highland Burma |
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70 | (8) |
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78 | (12) |
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Section 3 Function and Environment |
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89 | (1) |
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9 The Group and the Individual in Functional Analysis |
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90 | (12) |
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10 The Concept and Method of Cultural Ecology |
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102 | (7) |
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11 Energy and the Evolution of Culture |
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109 | (14) |
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12 Ecology, Cultural and Noncultural |
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123 | (7) |
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Section 4 Methods and Objects |
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129 | (1) |
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13 Understanding and Explanation in Social Anthropology |
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130 | (11) |
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14 Anthropological Data and Social Reality |
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141 | (10) |
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15 Objectification Objectified |
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151 | (12) |
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163 | (120) |
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Section 5 Meanings as Objects of Study |
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165 | (1) |
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16 Thick Description: Toward an Interpretive Theory of Culture |
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166 | (7) |
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17 Anthropology and the Analysis of Ideology |
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173 | (13) |
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18 Subjectivity and Cultural Critique |
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186 | (6) |
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Section 6 Language and Method |
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191 | (1) |
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19 Structural Analysis in Linguistics and in Anthropology |
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192 | (12) |
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20 Ordinary Language and Human Action |
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204 | (6) |
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21 Language, Anthropology and Cognitive Science |
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210 | (12) |
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Section 7 Cognition, Psychology, and Neuroanthropology |
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221 | (1) |
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22 Towards an Integration of Ethnography, History and the Cognitive Science of Religion |
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222 | (4) |
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23 Linguistic and Cultural Variables in the Psychology of Numeracy |
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226 | (5) |
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231 | (5) |
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25 Why the Behavioural Sciences Need the Concept of the Culture-Ready Brain |
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236 | (10) |
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Section 8 Bodies of Knowledges |
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245 | (1) |
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246 | (14) |
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260 | (16) |
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28 Hybridity: Hybrid Bodies of the Scientific Imaginary |
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276 | (7) |
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283 | (162) |
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Section 9 Coherence and Contingency |
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285 | (1) |
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29 Puritanism and the Spirit of Capitalism |
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286 | (7) |
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30 Introduction to Europe and the People Without History |
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293 | (15) |
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31 Introduction to Of Revelation and Revolution |
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308 | (14) |
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32 Epochal Structures I: Reconstructing Historical Materialism |
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322 | (10) |
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33 Structures and the Habitus |
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332 | (12) |
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Section 10 Universalisms and Domain Terms |
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343 | (1) |
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34 Body and Mind in Mind, Body and Mind in Body: Some Anthropological Interventions in a Long Conversation |
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344 | (13) |
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35 So Is Female to Male as Nature Is to Culture? |
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357 | (6) |
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36 Global Anxieties: Concept-Metaphors and Pre-theoretical Commitments in Anthropology |
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363 | (15) |
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Section 11 Perspectives and Their Logics |
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377 | (1) |
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37 The Rhetoric of Ethnographic Holism |
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378 | (8) |
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38 Writing Against Culture |
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386 | (14) |
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400 | (12) |
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Section 12 Objectivity, Morality, and Truth |
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411 | (1) |
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40 The Primacy of the Ethical: Propositions for a Militant Anthropology |
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412 | (7) |
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41 Moral Models in Anthropology |
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419 | (10) |
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42 Postmodernist Anthropology, Subjectivity, and Science: A Modernist Critique |
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429 | (12) |
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43 Beyond Good and Evil? Questioning the Anthropological Discomfort with Morals |
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441 | (4) |
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445 | (131) |
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Section 13 The Anthropology of Western Modes of Thought |
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447 | (1) |
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44 The Invention of Women |
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448 | (7) |
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45 Valorizing the Present: Orientalism, Postcoloniality and the Human Sciences |
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455 | (6) |
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46 Cosmological Deixis and Amerindian Perspectivism |
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461 | (15) |
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Eduardo Viveiros de Castro |
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Section 14 (Re)defining Objects of Inquiry |
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475 | (1) |
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47 What Was Life? Answers from Three Limit Biologies |
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476 | (5) |
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48 The Near and the Elsewhere |
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481 | (11) |
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492 | (10) |
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Section 15 Subjects, Objects, and Affect |
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501 | (1) |
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50 How to Read the Future: The Yield Curve, Affect, and Financial Prediction |
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502 | (6) |
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51 Signs Are Not the Garb of Meaning: On the Social Analysis of Material Things |
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508 | (6) |
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52 Affective Spaces, Melancholic Objects: Ruination and the Production of Anthropological Knowledge |
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514 | (8) |
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Section 16 Imagining Methodologies and Meta-things |
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521 | (1) |
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53 Beyond "Culture": Space, Identity, and the Politics of Difference |
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522 | (9) |
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54 What is at Stake - and is not - in the Idea and Practice of Multi-sited Ethnography |
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531 | (4) |
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55 Grassroots Globalization and the Research Imagination |
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535 | (12) |
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56 The End of Anthropology, Again: On the Future of an In/Discipline |
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547 | (9) |
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Section 17 Anthropologizing Ourselves |
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555 | (1) |
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57 Participant Objectivation |
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556 | (5) |
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58 Anthropology of Anthropology? Further Reflections on Reflexivity |
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561 | (5) |
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59 World Anthropologies: Cosmopolitics for a New Global Scenario in Anthropology |
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566 | (5) |
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60 Cultures of Expertise and the Management of Globalization: Toward the Re-functioning of Ethnography |
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571 | (5) |
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Index |
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576 | |