Image for Africanizing Anthropology : Fieldwork, Networks, and the Making of Cultural Knowledge in Central Africa

Africanizing Anthropology : Fieldwork, Networks, and the Making of Cultural Knowledge in Central Africa

See all formats and editions

Africanizing Anthropology tells the story of the anthropological fieldwork centered at the Rhodes-Livingstone Institute in Northern Rhodesia (now Zambia) during the mid-twentieth century.

Focusing on collaborative processes rather than on the activity of individual researchers, Lyn Schumaker gives the assistants and informants of anthropologists a central role in the making of anthropological knowledge.

Schumaker shows how local conditions and local ideas about culture and history, as well as previous experience of outsiders’ interest, shape local people’s responses to anthropological fieldwork and help them, in turn, to influence the construction of knowledge about their societies and lives.

Bringing to the fore a wide range of actors—missionaries, administrators, settlers, the families of anthropologists—Schumaker emphasizes the daily practices of researchers, demonstrating how these are as centrally implicated in the making of anthropological knowlege as the discipline’s methods.

Selecting a prominent group of anthropologists—The Manchester School—she reveals how they achieved the advances in theory and method that made them famous in the 1950s and 1960s. This book makes important contributions to anthropology, African history, and the history of science.

Read More
Special order line: only available to educational & business accounts. Sign In
£103.00
Product Details
Duke University Press
0822326787 / 9780822326786
Hardback
306.096
12/07/2001
United States
392 pages, 23 b&w photographs
939 grams