ABSTRACT

Anthropology is a kind of debate between human possibilities—a dialectical movement between the anthropologist as a modern man and the primitive peoples he studies. In Search of the Primitive is a tough-minded book containing chapters ranging from encounters in the field to essays on the nature of law, schizophrenia and civilization, and the evolution of the work of Claude Lévi-Strauss. Above all it is reflective and self-critical, critical of the discipline of anthropology and of the civilization that produced that discipline. Diamond views the anthropologist who refuses to become a searching critic of his own civilizations as not merely irresponsible, but a tool of Western civilization. He rejects the associations which have been made in the ideology of our civilization, consciously or unconsciously, between Western dominance and progress, imperialism and evolution, evolution and progress.

chapter 1|35 pages

Introduction: Civilization and Progress

chapter 2|32 pages

The Politics of Field Work

chapter 3|18 pages

Anthropology in Question

chapter 4|44 pages

The Search for the Primitive

chapter 5|20 pages

Plato and the Definition of the Primitive

chapter 6|18 pages

The Uses of the Primitive

chapter 7|21 pages

Schizophrenia and Civilization

chapter 8|20 pages

The Rule of Law Versus the Order of Custom

chapter 9|8 pages

Job and the Trickster

chapter 11|14 pages

What History Is

chapter |5 pages

Epilogue