Before Boas : the genesis of ethnography and ethnology in the German Enlightenment /

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Bibliographic Details
Author / Creator:Vermeulen, Han F., 1952- author.
Imprint:Lincoln : University of Nebraska Press, [2015]
©2015
Description:1 online resource (xxiii, 718 pages)
Language:English
Series:Critical studies in the history of anthropology
Critical studies in the history of anthropology.
Subject:
Format: E-Resource Book
URL for this record:http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/11243538
Hidden Bibliographic Details
ISBN:9780803277403
0803277407
9780803277380
0803277385
0803277393
9780803277397
9780803255425
080325542X
9780803277397
Notes:Includes bibliographical references and index.
Print version record.
Summary:"An extensive study of the emergence of ethnology and ethnography, and how theories in Europe and Russia during the eighteenth century experienced a paradigm shift with the work of Franz Boas starting in 1886"--
Other form:Print version: Vermeulen, Han F., 1952- Before Boas. Lincoln : University of Nebraska Press, [2015] 9780803255425
Review by Choice Review

In the US, anthropology includes the biological, linguistic, ethnological, and archaeological aspects of studying human beings in groups. Franz Boas initiated the integration of this holistic American anthropology and disseminated it after 1880. But in the 18th century, ethnology and anthropology developed as separate disciplines during the German Enlightenment. Ethnology was "a science of peoples" devoted to the study of cultural or ethnic diversity; anthropology was "a science of humans" devoted to racial, linguistic, and physical categories and differences. Alongside this distinction was another, between ethnology and ethnography. Ethnology developed as a theorized, comparative study of peoples; ethnography was empirical and descriptive. Both are integral to modern sociocultural anthropology, in which comparison and theory require ethnographic data. Vermeulen (Max Planck Institute for Social Anthropology, Halle, Germany) extricates the intellectual lineages of these separate disciplines from the matrix of Enlightenment thought. Anthropology was the province of naturalists and humanist philosophers and ethnology the province of historians and geographers. A short review cannot do justice to the sophistication of the author's comprehensive and remarkable research, which departs from histories that view the origins of anthropology in classical Greece or Renaissance exploration. For all arts and sciences graduate collections. Summing Up: Essential. Graduate and faculty collections. --Riva Berleant-Schiller, emerita, University of Connecticut

Copyright American Library Association, used with permission.
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