The Chimera Principle :An Anthropology of Memory and Imagination

Publication subTitle :An Anthropology of Memory and Imagination

Author: Carlo Severi  

Publisher: HAU‎

Publication year: 2015

E-ISBN: 9781912808052

P-ISBN(Hardback):  9780990505051

Subject: C0 Social Science Theory and Methodology

Keyword: 社会科学理论与方法论

Language: ENG

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Description

Available in English for the first time, anthropologist Carlo Severi’s The Chimera Principle breaks new theoretical ground for the study of ritual, iconographic technologies, and oral traditions among non-literate peoples. Setting himself against a tradition that has long seen the memory of people “without writing”—which relies on such ephemeral records as ornaments, body painting, and masks—as fundamentally disordered or doomed to failure, he argues strenuously that ritual actions in these societies pragmatically produce religious meaning and that they demonstrate what he calls a “chimeric” imagination.

Deploying philosophical and ethnographic theory, Severi unfolds new approaches to research in the anthropology of ritual and memory, ultimately building a new theory of imagination and an original anthropology of thought. This English-language edition, beautifully translated by Janet Lloyd and complete with a foreword by David Graeber, will spark widespread debate and be heralded as an instant classic for anthropologists, historians, and philosophers.


Chapter

Acknowledgments

Illustration sources

Introduction

1. Warburg the anthropologist , or the decoding of a utopia : From the biology of images to the anthropology of memory

Warburg: Visual symbols and chimeras

Forgotten roots, or the biology of images

Forms and ideas: Pitt-Rivers and the prophecy of the past

Hjalmar Stolpe: Prototypes and cryptoglyphs

A return to the lightning-snake

Warburg the anthropologist, or the decoding of a utopia

Image-sequences and chimera-objects

Image-sequences

Chimera-objects

2. An Amerindian mnemonic form: Pictography and parallelism

A decoding of pictography: The Dakota Bible

Pictography and shamanistic song: The Kuna case

A few more Amerindian cases

Pictography and mnemonic representation

3. Memory, projection, belief: Or, the metamorphoses of the locutor

A complex locutor

Projection and belief

Sound and sense: A musical way of listening

4. Christ in America: Or, an antagonistic memory

An Apache Christ

Lady Sebastiana

Image, conflict, and paradox

Conclusion

Bibliography

Index

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