The Politics of Anthropology :From Colonialism and Sexism Toward a View from Below ( World Anthropology )

Publication subTitle :From Colonialism and Sexism Toward a View from Below

Publication series :World Anthropology

Author: Gerrit Huizer   Bruce Mannheim  

Publisher: De Gruyter Mouton‎

Publication year: 1979

E-ISBN: 9783110806458

P-ISBN(Paperback): 9789027977502

Subject:

Language: ENG

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Chapter

General Editor's Preface

pp.:  1 – 5

SECTION ONE: INTRODUCTION

pp.:  5 – 13

The Counterrevolutionary Tradition in African Studies: The Case of Applied Anthropology

pp.:  55 – 57

Anthropologists and Their Terminologies: A Critical Review

pp.:  57 – 79

Anthropology and the Colonial Encounter

pp.:  79 – 97

SECTION THREE: SEXISM IN ANTHROPOLOGY

pp.:  97 – 107

Viricentrism and Anthropology

pp.:  107 – 109

Aboriginal Woman: Male and Female Anthropological Perspectives

pp.:  109 – 129

Women, Development, and Anthropological Facts and Fictions

pp.:  129 – 143

SECTION FOUR: "ETHICAL QUESTION" OR "POLITICAL CHOICE"?

pp.:  143 – 155

Colonial and Postcolonial Anthropology of Africa: Scholarship or Sentiment?

pp.:  155 – 157

Social Reality and the Anthropologists

pp.:  157 – 173

The Relevance of Contemporary Economic Anthropology

pp.:  173 – 183

Notes on the Present-Day State of Anthropology in the Third World

pp.:  183 – 199

Anthropology = Ideology, Applied Anthropology = Politics

pp.:  199 – 213

SECTION FIVE: FROM "ACADEMIC COLONIALISM" TO "COMMITTED ANTHROPOLOGY"

pp.:  213 – 225

The Social Responsibility of Anthropological Science in the Context of Contemporary Brazil

pp.:  225 – 227

The Meaning of Wounded Knee, 1973: Indian Self-Government and the Role of Anthropology

pp.:  227 – 239

From Applied to Committed Anthropology: Disengaging from Our Colonialist Heritage

pp.:  239 – 271

SECTION SIX: DILEMMAS OF ACTION RESEARCH AND COMMITMENT

pp.:  271 – 279

Anthropology, "Snooping," and Commitment: A View from Papua New Guinea

pp.:  279 – 281

Anthropology in Melanesia: Retrospect and Prospect

pp.:  281 – 287

Is Useful Action Research Possible?

pp.:  287 – 293

How Can Revolutionary Anthropology Be Practiced?

pp.:  293 – 303

The Role of the Anthropologist in Minority Education: The Chicano Case

pp.:  303 – 309

SECTION SEVEN: TOWARD A VIEW FROM BELOW AND FROM WITHIN

pp.:  309 – 319

Participant Observation or Partisan Participation?

pp.:  319 – 321

On Objectivity in Fieldwork

pp.:  321 – 331

Breaking Through the Looking Glass: The View from Below

pp.:  331 – 337

On Being a Native Anthropologist

pp.:  337 – 355

Ethnology in a Revolutionary Setting

pp.:  355 – 365

SECTION EIGHT: ATTEMPTS AT LIBERATION ANTHROPOLOGY

pp.:  365 – 383

On the Participant Study of Women's Movements: Methodological, Definitional, and Action Considerations

pp.:  383 – 385

Research-Through-Action: Some Practical Experiences with Peasant Organization

pp.:  385 – 407

Anthropology of the Multinational Corporation

pp.:  407 – 433

Nationalism, Race-Class Consciousness, and Action Research on Bougainville Island, Papua New Guinea

pp.:  433 – 459

Research from Within and from Below: Reversing the Machinery

pp.:  459 – 473

APPENDIX

pp.:  473 – 491

Foundations on the Move

pp.:  491 – 493

Biographical Notes

pp.:  493 – 507

Index of Names

pp.:  507 – 515

Index of Subjects

pp.:  515 – 523

LastPages

pp.:  523 – 533

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