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Culture Through Time Emiko Ohnuki-Tierney

Culture Through Time By Emiko Ohnuki-Tierney

Culture Through Time by Emiko Ohnuki-Tierney


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Summary

Recent years have seen an exchange between anthropology and history, each field taking on a new dimension in consequence. These papers demonstrate the vitality, growth and promise in new challenges to a discipline no longer satisfied with approaches epitomized in the ethnographic present.

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Culture Through Time Summary

Culture Through Time: Anthropological Approaches by Emiko Ohnuki-Tierney

Anthropological literature has traditionally been static and synchronic, only occasionally according a role to historical processes. but recent years have seen a burgeoning exchange between anthropology and history, each field taking on a powerful new dimension in consequence. Just what this means for anthropologists has not been clear, and this collection (eight core papers plus introduction and final commentary) introduces focus and direction to this interface between anthropology challenges several basic assumptions long held by anthropologists. Researchers can no longer be satisfied with approaches epitomized in 'the ethnographic present'. Society may be a bounded entity, but culture cannot be treated as such; a culture should be examined as it has interacted with other cultures and with its environment over time. Many traditionalists in anthropology, faced with these disturbing new challenges, fear the disintegration of the discipline; but these thoughtful papers demonstrate, on the contrary, its vitality, growth, and promise. In this volume, major figures in symbolic/semiotic anthropology offer various approaches to examining culture through time - culture mediated by history and history mediated by culture - in its complexity and dynamics. The eight core papers focus on particular cultures in various locales: Hawaii, Nepal, Spain, Japan, Israel, India, and Indonesia. No artifical unity - theoretical, thematic, or epistemological - has been imposed. The strength of the volume derives from a complementary diversity and tension, as each player, drawing on a particular culture, offers an original way of penetrating that culture's historical dimensions.

Culture Through Time Reviews

Provides one of the best 'conjunctions' of history and anthropology we have. -- Journal of Social History
Flowers That Kill is an impressive, wide-ranging feat of scholarship that illuminates a fascinating topic: the capacity of flowers to shift imperceptibly from benevolent symbols to harbingers of death and destruction. The deft but nuanced way in which Ohnuki-Tierney handles this sensitive material makes the book of crucial importance to academics and non-academics alike-really, to anyone still troubled by the horrors of World War II or by the human calamities of our times. -- Peter Geschiere * University of Amsterdam, author of Perils of Belonging *
Few contemporary anthropologists write with the emotional depth and complexity of thought as Emiko Ohnuki-Tierney. In Flowers That Kill Ohnuki-Tierney takes on a most difficult task, asking how symbolic meaning changes-how symbols that carry core values become politically opaque, often subverting their moral content in ways that also subvert human action. Flowers That Kill not only shows the power of what we take for granted, but offers a compassionate acceptance of perhaps the greatest challenge to our humanness. -- A. David Napier * University College London *

Table of Contents

1. Introduction: the historicization of anthropology Emiko Ohnuki-Tierney 2. The political economy of Grandeur in Hawaii from 1810 to 1830 Marshall Sahlins 3. Patterns of history: cultural schemas in the foundings of sherpa religious institutions Sherry B. Ortner 4. Enclosures: boundary maintenance and its representations over time in Asturian mountain villages (Spain) James W. Fernandez 5. The monkey as self in Japanese culture Emiko Ohnuki-Tierney 6. Constitutive history: genealogy and narrative in the legitimation of Hawaiian kingship Valerio Valeri 7. Shaping time: the choice of the national emblem of Israel Don Handelman and Lea Shamgar-Handelman 8. Aryan invasions over four millennia Edmund Leach 9. Form and meaning in recent Indonesian history: some reflections in light of H. G. Gadamer's philosophy of history James L. Peacock 10. Historians, anthropologists, and symbols Peter Burke Index.

Additional information

CIN0804717915VG
9780804717915
0804717915
Culture Through Time: Anthropological Approaches by Emiko Ohnuki-Tierney
Used - Very Good
Paperback
Stanford University Press
19910101
344
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
This is a used book - there is no escaping the fact it has been read by someone else and it will show signs of wear and previous use. Overall we expect it to be in very good condition, but if you are not entirely satisfied please get in touch with us

Customer Reviews - Culture Through Time