ANTHROPOLOGY IN FRANCE
In France as elsewhere, anthropology developed as an autonomous discipline concerned with the study of faraway primitive or "exotic" societies, but it has shifted its purview, especially over the past several decades, to also include societies closer to home in both time and space. Conside...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Annual review of anthropology 2001-01, Vol.30 (1), p.481-504 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | In France as elsewhere, anthropology developed as an autonomous discipline
concerned with the study of faraway primitive or "exotic"
societies, but it has shifted its purview, especially over the past several
decades, to also include societies closer to home in both time and space.
Consideration of the substantial literature produced over the past 30 years by
French anthropologists conducting research in France illustrates the
specificities of national disciplinary traditions in perceiving and meeting
this challenge. Anthropology's position within the institutional framework
of contemporary French academic and scholarly life, as well as the intellectual
traditions that have been brought to bear on the ethnological study of France
(especially the legacies of Durkheimian social thought and folklore studies)
are shown to have helped shape both the production of anthropological knowledge
of and in France and debates about its pertinence to the discipline's
future. |
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ISSN: | 0084-6570 1545-4290 |
DOI: | 10.1146/annurev.anthro.30.1.481 |