Recovering Ancestors in Anthropological Traditions
Herausgeber: Darnell, Regna; Gleach, Frederic W
Recovering Ancestors in Anthropological Traditions
Herausgeber: Darnell, Regna; Gleach, Frederic W
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Recovering Ancestors in Anthropological Traditions focuses on individual scholars and national developments to build an understanding of a vital and diverse global discipline.
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Recovering Ancestors in Anthropological Traditions focuses on individual scholars and national developments to build an understanding of a vital and diverse global discipline.
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Nebraska
- Seitenzahl: 372
- Erscheinungstermin: 1. August 2025
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781496242297
- ISBN-10: 1496242297
- Artikelnr.: 71868182
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
- Verlag: Nebraska
- Seitenzahl: 372
- Erscheinungstermin: 1. August 2025
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781496242297
- ISBN-10: 1496242297
- Artikelnr.: 71868182
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
Regna Darnell is Distinguished University Professor of anthropology emerita at the University of Western Ontario. She is the author of History of Theory and Method in Anthropology (Nebraska, 2022). Darnell is the general editor of The Franz Boas Papers: Documentary Edition series and coeditor of the Critical Studies in the History of Anthropology series. Frederic W. Gleach is a senior lecturer and curator of the Anthropology Collections at Cornell University. He is the author of Powhatan’s World and Colonial Virginia: A Conflict of Cultures (Nebraska, 1997).
List of Illustrations
Editors’ Introduction by Regna Darnell and Frederic W. Gleach
1. Rooting in the Subterranean: Underground Dwellers in Northern Indigenous
Narratives and Metropolitan Anthropological Theories
Dmitry V. Arzyutov
2. Between Polish and British Academia and Macedonian Fieldwork: Józef
Obr¿bski and the First Functionalist Research of the European Village
Anna Engelking
3. “This Incredibly Fast Upswing of the American Negroes”: Felix von
Luschan’s “Die Neger in den Vereinigten Staaten” (1915)
John David Smith and Sylvia Angelica Smith
4. The Institutionalization of Anthropology in Portugal: Contributions from
the University of Coimbra
Patrícia Ferraz de Matos
5. Between Science and Ideology: An Intellectual Biography of António
Mendes Correia (1888–1960)
Patrícia Ferraz de Matos
6. John Wesley Powell, John DeWitt Clinton Atkins, and the Battle over
American Indian Languages
Leila Monaghan
7. The Relationship between Literature and Ethnography: The Example of
Edward Sapir, 1917–22
James M. Nyce
8. Edward Sapir, Harry Stack Sullivan, and Harold Lasswell Collaborations:
Real and Imagined
Richard J. Preston
9. Silenced Bodies: The Accession of Mortal Remains in the Museum of
Ethnography, 1904–16, during the Argentinian Gran Chaco Military Campaigns
Sandra Tolosa and Lena Dávila
A Special Style: Nancy Oestreich Lurie’s Legacy of Engaged Anthropology
Special section edited by Grant Arndt and Larry Nesper
10. Introduction to Nancy Lurie’s Work
Larry Nesper
11. “Pow-Wow-How-Taxed-We-Are”: Nancy Lurie and Sol Tax
Judy Daubenmier
12. Nancy Lurie and Ho-Chunk Reorganization: Action Anthropology,
Indigenous Nation Rebuilding, and the Struggle for Decolonization
Grant Arndt
13. Unmasking “The Fallacy of Misplaced Concreteness”: Nancy Lurie, Jean
Nicolet, and the Ho-Chunks
Patrick J. Jung
14. Merging Worlds: Writing to Be Read, Hanging Out with Indian People
Alice B. Kehoe and Dawn Scher Thomae
15. Introduction to Nancy Lurie’s “Applied Anthropology”
Joshua Smith
16. Applied Anthropology
Nancy Oestreich Lurie
17. Nancy Oestreich Lurie: Bibliography
Patrick J. Jung
Contributors
Editors’ Introduction by Regna Darnell and Frederic W. Gleach
1. Rooting in the Subterranean: Underground Dwellers in Northern Indigenous
Narratives and Metropolitan Anthropological Theories
Dmitry V. Arzyutov
2. Between Polish and British Academia and Macedonian Fieldwork: Józef
Obr¿bski and the First Functionalist Research of the European Village
Anna Engelking
3. “This Incredibly Fast Upswing of the American Negroes”: Felix von
Luschan’s “Die Neger in den Vereinigten Staaten” (1915)
John David Smith and Sylvia Angelica Smith
4. The Institutionalization of Anthropology in Portugal: Contributions from
the University of Coimbra
Patrícia Ferraz de Matos
5. Between Science and Ideology: An Intellectual Biography of António
Mendes Correia (1888–1960)
Patrícia Ferraz de Matos
6. John Wesley Powell, John DeWitt Clinton Atkins, and the Battle over
American Indian Languages
Leila Monaghan
7. The Relationship between Literature and Ethnography: The Example of
Edward Sapir, 1917–22
James M. Nyce
8. Edward Sapir, Harry Stack Sullivan, and Harold Lasswell Collaborations:
Real and Imagined
Richard J. Preston
9. Silenced Bodies: The Accession of Mortal Remains in the Museum of
Ethnography, 1904–16, during the Argentinian Gran Chaco Military Campaigns
Sandra Tolosa and Lena Dávila
A Special Style: Nancy Oestreich Lurie’s Legacy of Engaged Anthropology
Special section edited by Grant Arndt and Larry Nesper
10. Introduction to Nancy Lurie’s Work
Larry Nesper
11. “Pow-Wow-How-Taxed-We-Are”: Nancy Lurie and Sol Tax
Judy Daubenmier
12. Nancy Lurie and Ho-Chunk Reorganization: Action Anthropology,
Indigenous Nation Rebuilding, and the Struggle for Decolonization
Grant Arndt
13. Unmasking “The Fallacy of Misplaced Concreteness”: Nancy Lurie, Jean
Nicolet, and the Ho-Chunks
Patrick J. Jung
14. Merging Worlds: Writing to Be Read, Hanging Out with Indian People
Alice B. Kehoe and Dawn Scher Thomae
15. Introduction to Nancy Lurie’s “Applied Anthropology”
Joshua Smith
16. Applied Anthropology
Nancy Oestreich Lurie
17. Nancy Oestreich Lurie: Bibliography
Patrick J. Jung
Contributors
List of Illustrations
Editors’ Introduction by Regna Darnell and Frederic W. Gleach
1. Rooting in the Subterranean: Underground Dwellers in Northern Indigenous
Narratives and Metropolitan Anthropological Theories
Dmitry V. Arzyutov
2. Between Polish and British Academia and Macedonian Fieldwork: Józef
Obr¿bski and the First Functionalist Research of the European Village
Anna Engelking
3. “This Incredibly Fast Upswing of the American Negroes”: Felix von
Luschan’s “Die Neger in den Vereinigten Staaten” (1915)
John David Smith and Sylvia Angelica Smith
4. The Institutionalization of Anthropology in Portugal: Contributions from
the University of Coimbra
Patrícia Ferraz de Matos
5. Between Science and Ideology: An Intellectual Biography of António
Mendes Correia (1888–1960)
Patrícia Ferraz de Matos
6. John Wesley Powell, John DeWitt Clinton Atkins, and the Battle over
American Indian Languages
Leila Monaghan
7. The Relationship between Literature and Ethnography: The Example of
Edward Sapir, 1917–22
James M. Nyce
8. Edward Sapir, Harry Stack Sullivan, and Harold Lasswell Collaborations:
Real and Imagined
Richard J. Preston
9. Silenced Bodies: The Accession of Mortal Remains in the Museum of
Ethnography, 1904–16, during the Argentinian Gran Chaco Military Campaigns
Sandra Tolosa and Lena Dávila
A Special Style: Nancy Oestreich Lurie’s Legacy of Engaged Anthropology
Special section edited by Grant Arndt and Larry Nesper
10. Introduction to Nancy Lurie’s Work
Larry Nesper
11. “Pow-Wow-How-Taxed-We-Are”: Nancy Lurie and Sol Tax
Judy Daubenmier
12. Nancy Lurie and Ho-Chunk Reorganization: Action Anthropology,
Indigenous Nation Rebuilding, and the Struggle for Decolonization
Grant Arndt
13. Unmasking “The Fallacy of Misplaced Concreteness”: Nancy Lurie, Jean
Nicolet, and the Ho-Chunks
Patrick J. Jung
14. Merging Worlds: Writing to Be Read, Hanging Out with Indian People
Alice B. Kehoe and Dawn Scher Thomae
15. Introduction to Nancy Lurie’s “Applied Anthropology”
Joshua Smith
16. Applied Anthropology
Nancy Oestreich Lurie
17. Nancy Oestreich Lurie: Bibliography
Patrick J. Jung
Contributors
Editors’ Introduction by Regna Darnell and Frederic W. Gleach
1. Rooting in the Subterranean: Underground Dwellers in Northern Indigenous
Narratives and Metropolitan Anthropological Theories
Dmitry V. Arzyutov
2. Between Polish and British Academia and Macedonian Fieldwork: Józef
Obr¿bski and the First Functionalist Research of the European Village
Anna Engelking
3. “This Incredibly Fast Upswing of the American Negroes”: Felix von
Luschan’s “Die Neger in den Vereinigten Staaten” (1915)
John David Smith and Sylvia Angelica Smith
4. The Institutionalization of Anthropology in Portugal: Contributions from
the University of Coimbra
Patrícia Ferraz de Matos
5. Between Science and Ideology: An Intellectual Biography of António
Mendes Correia (1888–1960)
Patrícia Ferraz de Matos
6. John Wesley Powell, John DeWitt Clinton Atkins, and the Battle over
American Indian Languages
Leila Monaghan
7. The Relationship between Literature and Ethnography: The Example of
Edward Sapir, 1917–22
James M. Nyce
8. Edward Sapir, Harry Stack Sullivan, and Harold Lasswell Collaborations:
Real and Imagined
Richard J. Preston
9. Silenced Bodies: The Accession of Mortal Remains in the Museum of
Ethnography, 1904–16, during the Argentinian Gran Chaco Military Campaigns
Sandra Tolosa and Lena Dávila
A Special Style: Nancy Oestreich Lurie’s Legacy of Engaged Anthropology
Special section edited by Grant Arndt and Larry Nesper
10. Introduction to Nancy Lurie’s Work
Larry Nesper
11. “Pow-Wow-How-Taxed-We-Are”: Nancy Lurie and Sol Tax
Judy Daubenmier
12. Nancy Lurie and Ho-Chunk Reorganization: Action Anthropology,
Indigenous Nation Rebuilding, and the Struggle for Decolonization
Grant Arndt
13. Unmasking “The Fallacy of Misplaced Concreteness”: Nancy Lurie, Jean
Nicolet, and the Ho-Chunks
Patrick J. Jung
14. Merging Worlds: Writing to Be Read, Hanging Out with Indian People
Alice B. Kehoe and Dawn Scher Thomae
15. Introduction to Nancy Lurie’s “Applied Anthropology”
Joshua Smith
16. Applied Anthropology
Nancy Oestreich Lurie
17. Nancy Oestreich Lurie: Bibliography
Patrick J. Jung
Contributors