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Theory in Anthropology since the Sixties
2.8K
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77
References
1984
Year
Social ResearchLinguistic AnthropologyParticipant ObservationEducationContemporary CultureCognitive AnthropologySocial SciencesEthnocentrismDiscourse AnalysisLanguage StudiesMarvin HarrisGeohumanitiesInterdisciplinary StudiesHuman ScienceEthnomethodologyTheory BuildingCultureNew York TimesEthnographyAnthropologySocial AnthropologyCultural AnthropologyEric WolfSocial Diversity
Every year, around the time of the meetings of the American Anthropological Association, the New York Times asks a Big Name anthropologist to contribute an op-ed piece on the state of the field. These pieces tend to take a rather gloomy view. A few years ago, for example, Marvin Harris suggested that anthropology was being taken over by mystics, religious fanatics, and California cultists; that the meetings were dominated by panels on shamanism, witchcraft, and “abnormal phenomena”; and that “scientific papers based on empirical studies” had been willfully excluded from the program (Harris 1978). More recently, in a more sober tone, Eric Wolf suggested that the field of anthropology is coming apart. The sub-fields (and sub-sub-fields) are increasingly pursuing their specialized interests, losing contact with each other and with the whole. There is no longer a shared discourse, a shared set of terms to which all practitioners address themselves, a shared language we all, however idiosyncratically, speak (Wolf 1980).
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