Browse Titles - 12 results
Invisible Genealogies: A History of Americanist Anthropology
written by Regna Darnell, in Critical Studies in the History of Anthropology (Lincoln, NE: University of Nebraska Press, 2001, originally published 2001), 404 page(s)
Sample
written by Regna Darnell, in Critical Studies in the History of Anthropology (Lincoln, NE: University of Nebraska Press, 2001, originally published 2001), 404 page(s)
Field of Study
Anthropology
Content Type
General reference book
Contributor
Regna Darnell
Author / Creator
Regna Darnell
Date Published / Released
2001
Publisher
University of Nebraska Press
Series
Critical Studies in the History of Anthropology
Topic / Theme
American, Cultural identity, Genealogy, Philosophy, Anthropology, Language and linguistics, Ethnography, Americans
Copyright Message
Copyright © 2001 by University of Nebraska Press
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Discussion I - 23rd October, 1935
written by University of London. School of Oriental and African Studies, in Bronislaw Malinowski Papers (LSE), of London School of Economics and Political Science. Library. Archives and Special Collections Team (Box 5: Linguistic notes and lectures, based on Trobriand Islands fieldwork, Folder 23: [Lectures on Iinguistics]) (London, England) (26 October 1935) , 20 page(s)
Date: 23.10.35. Place: London. Ten typed pages contain notes from a discussion session associated with a seminar on language and culture at the University of London's School of Oriental Studies, possibly set down by a student. The notes take the form of a transcript, with some abridgement and paraphrasing. Partici...
Sample
written by University of London. School of Oriental and African Studies, in Bronislaw Malinowski Papers (LSE), of London School of Economics and Political Science. Library. Archives and Special Collections Team (Box 5: Linguistic notes and lectures, based on Trobriand Islands fieldwork, Folder 23: [Lectures on Iinguistics]) (London, England) (26 October 1935) , 20 page(s)
Description
Date: 23.10.35. Place: London. Ten typed pages contain notes from a discussion session associated with a seminar on language and culture at the University of London's School of Oriental Studies, possibly set down by a student. The notes take the form of a transcript, with some abridgement and paraphrasing. Participants are identified only by brief abbreviations, though several are addressed by name in this or previous documents: Kur (Jerzy Kurylo...
Date: 23.10.35. Place: London. Ten typed pages contain notes from a discussion session associated with a seminar on language and culture at the University of London's School of Oriental Studies, possibly set down by a student. The notes take the form of a transcript, with some abridgement and paraphrasing. Participants are identified only by brief abbreviations, though several are addressed by name in this or previous documents: Kur (Jerzy Kurylowicz, a Polish linguist); Wal (Andrzej Waligórski, a Polish anthropologist); P.P. ('Peter'); Stang (Christian, a Norwegian linguist); Pid (Ralph Piddington, a New Zealand psychologist); and B.M., Malinowski himself. Discussion concerns the content of an expression itself and the action it may cause, with mention of de Laguna (probably Frederica) and Otto Jespersen. Notes at the top read 'At 6, Opp.' clarified in later documents as indicating the discussion group met at 6 Oppidans Road, London; and, written in green pencil, 'Home - discussion' suggesting it was a participant's home. The pages are typed on the back of reused stationery, partial documents of the University of London or of the British Social Hygiene Council.
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Date Written / Recorded
26 October 1935, 1935
Field of Study
Anthropology
Content Type
Lecture/presentation
Author / Creator
University of London. School of Oriental and African Studies
Person Discussed
Jerzy Kuryłowicz, 1895-1978, Bronisław Malinowski, 1884-1942, Christian Stang, 1900-1977, Ralph O. Piddington, 1906-1974
Topic / Theme
Language and linguistics, Ethnographic research theory
Copyright Message
Material sourced from the Bronislaw Kasper Malinowski Collection, LSE Library. Used with Permission of the LSE Library and the Bronislaw Malinowski Estate.
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The Dyula and the Manding World
written by Yves Person, 1925-1982, in Conference on Manding Studies, London, 1972, of Royal Anthropological Institute (London, England - Bloomsbury) (1972) , 19 page(s)
Sample
written by Yves Person, 1925-1982, in Conference on Manding Studies, London, 1972, of Royal Anthropological Institute (London, England - Bloomsbury) (1972) , 19 page(s)
Date Written / Recorded
1972
Field of Study
Anthropology
Content Type
Essay
Contributor
Yves Person, 1925-1982
Author / Creator
Yves Person, 1925-1982
Topic / Theme
Mandé, Mandinka (Mandingo, Malinke), Dyula (Dioula, Juula), African languages, Tribal and national groups, Historic research for anthropology, Islam, Mandinka, Jula
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Language and Culture - Discussion 2 at 6, Oppidans Rd. 8th November, 1935
written by University of London. School of Oriental and African Studies, in Bronislaw Malinowski Papers (LSE), of London School of Economics and Political Science. Library. Archives and Special Collections Team (Box 5: Linguistic notes and lectures, based on Trobriand Islands fieldwork, Folder 23: [Lectures on Iinguistics]) (London, England) (08 November 1935) , 10 page(s)
Date: 8.11.35. Place: London. Five typed pages contain notes from a discussion session at 6 Oppidans Rd., London - apparently a participant's home - associated with a seminar on language and culture at the University of London's School of Oriental Studies, possibly set down by a student. These notes take the form...
Sample
written by University of London. School of Oriental and African Studies, in Bronislaw Malinowski Papers (LSE), of London School of Economics and Political Science. Library. Archives and Special Collections Team (Box 5: Linguistic notes and lectures, based on Trobriand Islands fieldwork, Folder 23: [Lectures on Iinguistics]) (London, England) (08 November 1935) , 10 page(s)
Description
Date: 8.11.35. Place: London. Five typed pages contain notes from a discussion session at 6 Oppidans Rd., London - apparently a participant's home - associated with a seminar on language and culture at the University of London's School of Oriental Studies, possibly set down by a student. These notes take the form of a topical summary; others have been somewhat abridged transcripts. Only two participants are identified by brief abbreviations: Kur...
Date: 8.11.35. Place: London. Five typed pages contain notes from a discussion session at 6 Oppidans Rd., London - apparently a participant's home - associated with a seminar on language and culture at the University of London's School of Oriental Studies, possibly set down by a student. These notes take the form of a topical summary; others have been somewhat abridged transcripts. Only two participants are identified by brief abbreviations: Kur (Jerzy Kurylowicz, a Polish linguist); and B.M., Malinowski himself. Discussion concerns whether it is possible to define essential elements of every speech situation. The pages are typed on the back of reused stationery, partial documents of the University of London or of the British Social Hygiene Council.
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Date Written / Recorded
08 November 1935, 1935
Field of Study
Anthropology
Content Type
Lecture/presentation
Author / Creator
University of London. School of Oriental and African Studies
Person Discussed
Bronisław Malinowski, 1884-1942, Jerzy Kuryłowicz, 1895-1978
Topic / Theme
Language and linguistics, Ethnographic research theory
Copyright Message
Material sourced from the Bronislaw Kasper Malinowski Collection, LSE Library. Used with Permission of the LSE Library and the Bronislaw Malinowski Estate.
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Lecture II. 30th Oct. 1935 - [Mainly] Primary and Secondary Meaning
written by University of London. School of Oriental and African Studies, in Bronislaw Malinowski Papers (LSE), of London School of Economics and Political Science. Library. Archives and Special Collections Team (Box 5: Linguistic notes and lectures, based on Trobriand Islands fieldwork, Folder 23: [Lectures on Iinguistics]) (London, England) (30 October 1935) , 8 page(s)
Date: 30.10.35. Place: London. Six typed pages with occasional written corrections contain the text of a seminar or panel discussion on language and culture at the University of London's School of Oriental Studies, possibly transcribed by a student. Occasional passages are paraphrased rather than taken down verbat...
Sample
written by University of London. School of Oriental and African Studies, in Bronislaw Malinowski Papers (LSE), of London School of Economics and Political Science. Library. Archives and Special Collections Team (Box 5: Linguistic notes and lectures, based on Trobriand Islands fieldwork, Folder 23: [Lectures on Iinguistics]) (London, England) (30 October 1935) , 8 page(s)
Description
Date: 30.10.35. Place: London. Six typed pages with occasional written corrections contain the text of a seminar or panel discussion on language and culture at the University of London's School of Oriental Studies, possibly transcribed by a student. Occasional passages are paraphrased rather than taken down verbatim. Participants are identified only by brief abbreviations, though several were addressed by name in previous transcripts: Pid (Ralph...
Date: 30.10.35. Place: London. Six typed pages with occasional written corrections contain the text of a seminar or panel discussion on language and culture at the University of London's School of Oriental Studies, possibly transcribed by a student. Occasional passages are paraphrased rather than taken down verbatim. Participants are identified only by brief abbreviations, though several were addressed by name in previous transcripts: Pid (Ralph Piddington, a New Zealand psychologist); Kur (Jerzy Kurylowicz, a Polish linguist); Stang (Christian, a Norwegian linguist); Glu (Max Gluckman, a British anthropoligist);and B.M., presumably for Malinowski. Discussion concerns the relationship between function and form in language, with examples from Malinowski's experience in Melanesia. Two pages are typed on the back of reused stationery, administrative documents of the University of London such as a partial list of publications or partial exam results.
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Date Written / Recorded
30 October 1935, 1935
Field of Study
Anthropology
Content Type
Lecture/presentation
Author / Creator
University of London. School of Oriental and African Studies
Person Discussed
Bronisław Malinowski, 1884-1942, Max Gluckman, 1911-1975, Christian Stang, 1900-1977, Ralph O. Piddington, 1906-1974, Jerzy Kuryłowicz, 1895-1978
Topic / Theme
Language and linguistics, Field work for anthropology, Pacific Islanders
Copyright Message
Material sourced from the Bronislaw Kasper Malinowski Collection, LSE Library. Used with Permission of the LSE Library and the Bronislaw Malinowski Estate.
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Lectures Given at the School of Oriental Languages - Language and Culture I, Oct. 10, 1935
written by University of London. School of Oriental and African Studies, in Bronislaw Malinowski Papers (LSE), of London School of Economics and Political Science. Library. Archives and Special Collections Team (Box 5: Linguistic notes and lectures, based on Trobriand Islands fieldwork, Folder 23: [Lectures on Iinguistics]) (London, England) (16 October 1935) , 18 page(s)
Date: 16.10.35. Place: London. Nine typed pages contain the text of a seminar or panel discussion on language and culture at the University of London's School of Oriental Studies (a title at the top mistakenly calls it the School of Oriental Languages), possibly transcribed by a student. Occasional passages are pa...
Sample
written by University of London. School of Oriental and African Studies, in Bronislaw Malinowski Papers (LSE), of London School of Economics and Political Science. Library. Archives and Special Collections Team (Box 5: Linguistic notes and lectures, based on Trobriand Islands fieldwork, Folder 23: [Lectures on Iinguistics]) (London, England) (16 October 1935) , 18 page(s)
Description
Date: 16.10.35. Place: London. Nine typed pages contain the text of a seminar or panel discussion on language and culture at the University of London's School of Oriental Studies (a title at the top mistakenly calls it the School of Oriental Languages), possibly transcribed by a student. Occasional passages are paraphrased rather than taken down verbatim. Participants are identified only by brief abbreviations: Stang (probably Christian, a Norweg...
Date: 16.10.35. Place: London. Nine typed pages contain the text of a seminar or panel discussion on language and culture at the University of London's School of Oriental Studies (a title at the top mistakenly calls it the School of Oriental Languages), possibly transcribed by a student. Occasional passages are paraphrased rather than taken down verbatim. Participants are identified only by brief abbreviations: Stang (probably Christian, a Norwegian linguist); Pid (later addressed as Piddington, probably Ralph, a New Zealand psychologist); Kur (later addressed as Kurylowicz, probably Jerzy, a Polish linguist); Glu (later addressed as Gluckman, probably Max, a British anthropologist); Fad (later addressed as Fadipe, probably Nathaniel, a Nigerian anthropologist); Nor (later addressed as Norman); V.; N.B.; and B.M., presumably for Malinowski. Discussion revolves around the interconnectedness of linguistics and anthropology. The text is typed on the back of reused stationery, administrative documents of the University of London such as a list of external examinership candidates for the 1936 school year.
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Date Written / Recorded
16 October 1935, 1935
Field of Study
Anthropology
Content Type
Lecture/presentation
Author / Creator
University of London. School of Oriental and African Studies
Person Discussed
Jerzy Kuryłowicz, 1895-1978, Ralph O. Piddington, 1906-1974, Christian Stang, 1900-1977, Max Gluckman, 1911-1975, Bronisław Malinowski, 1884-1942
Topic / Theme
Language and linguistics, Field work for anthropology
Copyright Message
Material sourced from the Bronislaw Kasper Malinowski Collection, LSE Library. Used with Permission of the LSE Library and the Bronislaw Malinowski Estate.
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Letter from Bronislaw Malinowski to Charles Seligman, October 19, 1915
written by Bronisław Malinowski, 1884-1942, in Bronislaw Malinowski Papers (LSE), of London School of Economics and Political Science. Library. Archives and Special Collections Team (Box 27: Correspondence with Charles Seligman, Folder 3: Correspondence between Malinowski and Seligman) (London, England) (19 October 1915) , 2 page(s)
Date: 19.10.15. Place: Omarakana (Kiriwina). A two-page, hand-written letter from Bronislaw Malinowski to Charles Seligman offers Christmas good wishes and mentions his work among the Kiriwinians; learning their language and the loss of his interpreter; and his general physical and emotional state.
Sample
written by Bronisław Malinowski, 1884-1942, in Bronislaw Malinowski Papers (LSE), of London School of Economics and Political Science. Library. Archives and Special Collections Team (Box 27: Correspondence with Charles Seligman, Folder 3: Correspondence between Malinowski and Seligman) (London, England) (19 October 1915) , 2 page(s)
Description
Date: 19.10.15. Place: Omarakana (Kiriwina). A two-page, hand-written letter from Bronislaw Malinowski to Charles Seligman offers Christmas good wishes and mentions his work among the Kiriwinians; learning their language and the loss of his interpreter; and his general physical and emotional state.
Date Written / Recorded
19 October 1915, 1915
Field of Study
Anthropology
Content Type
Letter
Author / Creator
Bronisław Malinowski, 1884-1942
Topic / Theme
Health, Field work for anthropology, Anthropological linguistics, Trobriand Islanders
Copyright Message
Material sourced from the Bronislaw Kasper Malinowski Collection, LSE Library. Used with Permission of the LSE Library and the Bronislaw Malinowski Estate.
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Race, Language and Culture
written by Franz Boas, 1858-1942 (New York, NY: Free Press, 1966), 669 page(s)
Sample
written by Franz Boas, 1858-1942 (New York, NY: Free Press, 1966), 669 page(s)
Field of Study
Anthropology
Content Type
General reference book
Contributor
Franz Boas, 1858-1942
Author / Creator
Franz Boas, 1858-1942
Date Published / Released
1966
Publisher
Free Press
Topic / Theme
Ethnographic methodology, Anthropology, Cultural identity, Race relations, Language and linguistics
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Refiguring Anthropology: First Principles of Probability and Statistics
written by David Hurst Thomas (Long Grove, IL: Waveland Press, Inc., originally published 1986), 558 page(s)
Sample
written by David Hurst Thomas (Long Grove, IL: Waveland Press, Inc., originally published 1986), 558 page(s)
Field of Study
Anthropology
Content Type
General reference book
Contributor
David Hurst Thomas
Author / Creator
David Hurst Thomas
Date Published / Released
1986
Publisher
Waveland Press, Inc.
Topic / Theme
Reporting anthropological data, Ethnographic methodology
Copyright Message
Copyright © 1986 by Waveland Press
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Seminar transcription: Language and Culture I, Oct. 8, 1932
in Bronislaw Malinowski Papers (LSE), of London School of Economics and Political Science. Library. Archives and Special Collections Team (Box 5: Linguistic notes and lectures, based on Trobriand Islands fieldwork, Folder 23: [Lectures on Iinguistics]) (London, England) (08 October 1932) , 8 page(s)
Four somewhat ragged pages, typed in 1932 and hand-annotated in 1935, contain a transcription of a seminar or panel discussion on language and culture among the participants: B.M., presumably Malinowski; Colonel Lorimer, probably Lt. Col. David L.R. Lorimer, a noted linguist; Hofstra; and Kramer. The main topic of...
Sample
in Bronislaw Malinowski Papers (LSE), of London School of Economics and Political Science. Library. Archives and Special Collections Team (Box 5: Linguistic notes and lectures, based on Trobriand Islands fieldwork, Folder 23: [Lectures on Iinguistics]) (London, England) (08 October 1932) , 8 page(s)
Description
Four somewhat ragged pages, typed in 1932 and hand-annotated in 1935, contain a transcription of a seminar or panel discussion on language and culture among the participants: B.M., presumably Malinowski; Colonel Lorimer, probably Lt. Col. David L.R. Lorimer, a noted linguist; Hofstra; and Kramer. The main topic of discussion is the learning of native languages in anthropological field work. The later notes - for instance, 'The Anthro approach (se...
Four somewhat ragged pages, typed in 1932 and hand-annotated in 1935, contain a transcription of a seminar or panel discussion on language and culture among the participants: B.M., presumably Malinowski; Colonel Lorimer, probably Lt. Col. David L.R. Lorimer, a noted linguist; Hofstra; and Kramer. The main topic of discussion is the learning of native languages in anthropological field work. The later notes - for instance, 'The Anthro approach (see also Preface to C.G.)' - may be in aid of incorporating the content into another work. The pages are typed on the backs of reused stationery, a typed agenda for the June 8, 1932, meeting of the Professorial Council of the London School of Economics and Political Science.
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Date Written / Recorded
08 October 1932, 1932
Field of Study
Anthropology
Content Type
Essay
Contributor
Bronisław Malinowski, 1884-1942
Author / Creator
Bronisław Malinowski, 1884-1942
Topic / Theme
Interviewing techniques for anthropology
Copyright Message
Material sourced from the Bronislaw Kasper Malinowski Collection, LSE Library. Used with Permission of the LSE Library and the Bronislaw Malinowski Estate.
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