After Tylor: British Social Anthropology, 1888-1951

After Tylor: British Social Anthropology, 1888-1951

by George W. Stocking (Author), Stephen Jacobson (Editor), Josep M. Fradera (Editor)

$36.90

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More Information

Format: Illustrated
Pages: 592
Edition: Illustrated
Publisher: University of Wisconsin Press
Published: Jan 1999

ISBN 10: 0299145840
ISBN 13: 9780299145842

Media Reviews

This impressively solid, judicious, and authoritative text will surely serve the profession for a long time to come. --Michael Young, Journal of the History of the Behavioral Sciences


The publication of After Tylor, taken together with Victorian Anthropology, represents a milestone in the historiography of the behavioural sciences. --Robert Ackerman, London Review of Books


After Tylor is thus an effort to reconstruct and understand modes of thought which--though hardly discontinuous--were still rather different from our own. In this, it is utterly and completely successful. --Robert Alun Jones, American Journal of Sociology


This is magnificent scholarship. Furthermore it proves that a discourse intended to complicate received ideas can also be eminently readable. --Michael Herzfeld, American Scientist


Formidable as its scope is, this account is also eminently readable. The layering of each character will ensure that it can be read at all levels of anthropological sophistication. --Marilyn Strathern, Times Higher Education Supplement


There are many reasons that George Stocking is generally recognized as the leading historian of anthropology. His ability to breathe life into the dead is not the least of them. --Henry Munson, Jr., Religion


Few scholarly books of this considerable length deserve to be read from cover to cover, but Stocking's After Tylor is surely one of them. --Tamara Kohn, Metascience

Author Bio
George Stocking, Jr., is the Stein-Freiler Distinguished Service Professor in the Department of Anthropology and the Committee on the Conceptual Foundations of Science at the University of Chicago. He is the founding editor of the History of Anthropology series and author of Ethnographer's Magic, both published by the University of Wisconsin Press. Winner of the 1993 Huxley Medal of the Royal Anthropological Institute, he is also the author of Victorian Anthropology.