The Anthropologist, the Jester, and the Poet: An Oral History Interview with Bruce Grindal about the Society for Humanistic Anthropology
B ruce G rindal played an instrumental role in the S ociety for H umanistic A nthropology ( SHA ), which he helped found in 1974 at an A merican A nthropological A ssociation meeting in M exico C ity. He became the editor of The A nthropology and H umanism Q uarterly ( AHQ ) in 1976, a journal that...
Ausführliche Beschreibung
Autor*in: |
Sarkis, Marianne M [verfasserIn] |
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Format: |
Artikel |
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Sprache: |
Englisch |
Erschienen: |
2015 |
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Rechteinformationen: |
Nutzungsrecht: © 2015 by the American Anthropological Association |
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Schlagwörter: |
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Übergeordnetes Werk: |
Enthalten in: Anthropology and humanism - Berkeley, Calif. : Univ. of California Press, 1993, 40(2015), 2, Seite 133-140 |
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Übergeordnetes Werk: |
volume:40 ; year:2015 ; number:2 ; pages:133-140 |
Links: |
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DOI / URN: |
10.1111/anhu.12084 |
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OLC1957279540 |
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Anthropology and humanism |
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2015 |
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Sarkis, Marianne M |
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author-letter |
Sarkis, Marianne M |
doi_str_mv |
10.1111/anhu.12084 |
dewey-full |
100 |
title_sort |
anthropologist, the jester, and the poet: an oral history interview with bruce grindal about the society for humanistic anthropology |
title_auth |
The Anthropologist, the Jester, and the Poet: An Oral History Interview with Bruce Grindal about the Society for Humanistic Anthropology |
abstract |
B ruce G rindal played an instrumental role in the S ociety for H umanistic A nthropology ( SHA ), which he helped found in 1974 at an A merican A nthropological A ssociation meeting in M exico C ity. He became the editor of The A nthropology and H umanism Q uarterly ( AHQ ) in 1976, a journal that eschewed traditional ethnographic writing, and celebrated and encouraged storytelling in anthropology. Poems, narratives, fictions, and short essays that were rejected as “not anthropology” by other journals found a home in AHQ . In this oral history interview, B ruce recalls the history of the SHA and the challenges it faced in its early days in gaining acceptance by other anthropologists. In his attempts to legitimize humanistic anthropology, he challenged the materialist and postmodernist anthropological paradigms of the time through a series of scathing articles that publicly challenged what he regarded as the “overly analyzed digested mystification” of reality. This oral history interview covers the periods from 1976 to 2005 at the 30th anniversary of the founding of the SHA and touches upon philosophical musings and highlights from B ruce G rindal's career. |
abstractGer |
B ruce G rindal played an instrumental role in the S ociety for H umanistic A nthropology ( SHA ), which he helped found in 1974 at an A merican A nthropological A ssociation meeting in M exico C ity. He became the editor of The A nthropology and H umanism Q uarterly ( AHQ ) in 1976, a journal that eschewed traditional ethnographic writing, and celebrated and encouraged storytelling in anthropology. Poems, narratives, fictions, and short essays that were rejected as “not anthropology” by other journals found a home in AHQ . In this oral history interview, B ruce recalls the history of the SHA and the challenges it faced in its early days in gaining acceptance by other anthropologists. In his attempts to legitimize humanistic anthropology, he challenged the materialist and postmodernist anthropological paradigms of the time through a series of scathing articles that publicly challenged what he regarded as the “overly analyzed digested mystification” of reality. This oral history interview covers the periods from 1976 to 2005 at the 30th anniversary of the founding of the SHA and touches upon philosophical musings and highlights from B ruce G rindal's career. |
abstract_unstemmed |
B ruce G rindal played an instrumental role in the S ociety for H umanistic A nthropology ( SHA ), which he helped found in 1974 at an A merican A nthropological A ssociation meeting in M exico C ity. He became the editor of The A nthropology and H umanism Q uarterly ( AHQ ) in 1976, a journal that eschewed traditional ethnographic writing, and celebrated and encouraged storytelling in anthropology. Poems, narratives, fictions, and short essays that were rejected as “not anthropology” by other journals found a home in AHQ . In this oral history interview, B ruce recalls the history of the SHA and the challenges it faced in its early days in gaining acceptance by other anthropologists. In his attempts to legitimize humanistic anthropology, he challenged the materialist and postmodernist anthropological paradigms of the time through a series of scathing articles that publicly challenged what he regarded as the “overly analyzed digested mystification” of reality. This oral history interview covers the periods from 1976 to 2005 at the 30th anniversary of the founding of the SHA and touches upon philosophical musings and highlights from B ruce G rindal's career. |
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container_issue |
2 |
title_short |
The Anthropologist, the Jester, and the Poet: An Oral History Interview with Bruce Grindal about the Society for Humanistic Anthropology |
url |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/anhu.12084 http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/anhu.12084/abstract |
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doi_str |
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up_date |
2024-07-03T23:46:22.473Z |
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