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"From the Native's Point of View": On the Nature of Anthropological Understanding
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1974
Year
OrientalismEducationIndigenous PeopleIndigenous MovementSocial ChangeCultural StudiesSocial SciencesIndigenous StudyEthnocentrismCultural AnalysisAnthropological UnderstandingReligion StudiesMay 1974Language StudiesWorld CulturesIndigenous HeritageEthnomethodologyCultureIndigenous IdentityIslamic EconomicsCultural PracticesIndigenous Knowledge SystemsIndigenous StudiesSocial FoundationsEthnographyAnthropologyIslamic StudySocial AnthropologyCultural Anthropology
At the Annual Meeting in May 1974, the American Academy awarded its first Social Science Prize to Clifford Geertz for his significant contributions to social anthropology. Mr. Geertz has taught at Harvard University, the University of California at Berkeley, and the University of Chicago; in 1970 he became the first Professor of the Social Sciences at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton. Mr. Geertz' research has centered on the changing religious attitudes and habits of life of the Islamic peoples of Morocco and Indonesia; he is the author of Peddlers and Princes: Social Changes and Economic Modernization in Two Indonesian Towns (1963), The Social History of an Indonesian Town (1965), Islam Observed: Religious Developments in Morocco and Indonesia (1968), and a recent collection of essays, The Interpretation of Cultures (1973). In nominating Mr. Geertz for the award, the Academy's Social Science Prize Committee observed, each of these volumes is an important contribution in its own right; together they form an unrivaled corpus in modern social anthropology and social sciences.