The Anthropology of the Enlightenment

Cover
Larry Wolff, Marco Cipolloni
Stanford University Press, 04.09.2007 - 432 Seiten

The modern enterprise of anthropology, with all of its important implications for cross-cultural perceptions, perspectives, and self-consciousness emerged from the eighteenth-century intellectual context of the Enlightenment. If the Renaissance discovered perspective in art, it was the Enlightenment that articulated and explored the problem of perspective in viewing history, culture, and society. If the Renaissance was the age of oceanic discovery—most dramatically the discovery of the New World of America—the critical reflections of the Enlightenment brought about an intellectual rediscovery of the New World and thus laid the foundations for modern anthropology. The contributions that constitute this book present the multiple anthropological facets of the Enlightenment, and suggest that the character of its intellectual engagements—acknowledging global diversity, interpreting human societies, and bridging cultural difference—must be understood as a whole to be fundamentally anthropological.

Im Buch

Ausgewählte Seiten

Inhalt

Title Page
CHAPTER ONE Discovering Cultural Perspective
CHAPTER TWO Barbarians and the Redefinition of Europe
CHAPTER THREE The Immobility of China
CHAPTER FOUR Doux Commerce Douce Colonisation
CHAPTER FIVE Adam Smith and the Anthropology of
CHAPTER SIX Beyond the Savage Character
CHAPTER SEVEN Herders India
CHAPTER TEN Russia and Its Orient
CHAPTER ELEVEN Love in the Time of Hierarchy
CHAPTER TWELVE The Dreaming Body
CHAPTER THIRTEEN The Anthropology of Natural
CHAPTER FOURTEEN Animal Economy
CHAPTER SIXTEEN The Old World and the
Notes
Index

CHAPTER EIGHT The German Enlightenment and
CHAPTER NINE Persian Letters from Real People

Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen

Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen

Autoren-Profil (2007)

Larry Wolff is Professor of History at New York University. His books include Inventing Eastern Europe: The Map of Civilization on the Mind of the Enlightenment (Stanford, 1994), and Venice and the Slavs: The Discovery of Dalmatia in the Age of Enlightenment (Stanford, 2001). Marco Cipolloni is Professor and Chair of Spanish Language and Culture at the University of Modena and Reggio Emilia. His works include Il sovrano e la corte nelle "cartas" della Conquista(1991), Tra memoria apostolica e racconto profetico: Il compromesso etnografico francescano e le "cosas" della Nuova Spagna, (1994), and the critical edition of the Teatro completo of Miguel Angel Asturias (2003).

Bibliografische Informationen