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Book

Popularizing Anthropology

Book

Popularizing Anthropology

DOI link for Popularizing Anthropology

Popularizing Anthropology book

Popularizing Anthropology

DOI link for Popularizing Anthropology

Popularizing Anthropology book

Edited ByJeremy McClancy, Christian McDonaugh
Edition 1st Edition
First Published 1997
eBook Published 26 September 1996
Pub. Location London
Imprint Routledge
DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9780203436752
Pages 272
eBook ISBN 9780203436752
Subjects Social Sciences
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McClancy, J., & McDonaugh, C. (Eds.). (1997). Popularizing Anthropology (1st ed.). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9780203436752

ABSTRACT

Anthropology written for a popular audience is the most neglected branch of the discipline. In the 1980s postmodernist anthropologists began to explore the literary and reflective aspects of their work. Popularizing Anthropology advances that trend by looking at a key but previously marginalized genre of anthropology.
The contributors, who are well known anthropologists, explore such themes as: why so many anthropologists are women; how the Japanese have reacted to Ruth Benedict; why Margaret Mead became so successful; how the French media promote Levi-Strauss and Louis Dumont; Why Bruce Chatwin tells us more about Aboriginals than many anthropologists in Australia; how personal accounts of fieldwork have evolved since the 1950s; how to write a personal account of fieldwork.
Popularizing Anthropology unearths a submerged tradition within anthropology and reveals that, from the beginning, anthropologists have looked beyond the boundaries of the academy for their listeners. It aims to establish the popularization of the discipline as an illuminating topic of investigation in its own right, arguing that it is not an irrelevant appendage to the main body of the subject but has always been an integral part of it.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

chapter 1|57 pages

Popularizing anthropology

ByJeremy MacClancy

chapter 2|25 pages

Tricky tropes

Styles of the popular and the pompous
ByAlan Campbell

chapter 3|23 pages

Typecasting

Anthropology’s dramatis personae
ByWendy James

chapter 4|16 pages

The chrysanthemum continues to flower

Ruth Benedict and some perils of popular anthropology
ByJoy Hendry

chapter 5|13 pages

Communicating culture

Margaret Mead and the practice of popular anthropology
ByWilliam E. Mitchell

chapter 6|7 pages

Enlarging the context of anthropology

The case of Anthropology Today
ByJonathan Benthall

chapter 7|15 pages

Claude Lévi-Strauss and Louis Dumont

Media portraits
ByDominique Casajus

chapter 8|23 pages

Proximity and distance: representations of Aboriginal society in the writings of Bill Harney

Representations of Aboriginal society in the writings of Bill Harney and Bruce Chatwin
ByHoward Morphy

chapter 9|28 pages

Women readers

Other Utopias and own bodily knowledge
ByJudith Okely

chapter 10|17 pages

A bricoleur’s workshop

Writing Les lances du crépuscule
ByPhilippe Descola

chapter 11|20 pages

Fieldwork styles: Bohannan, Barley, and Gardner

Bohannan, Barley, and Gardner
ByJeremy MacClancy
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