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Chapter 3. Expressive Enlightenment: Subjectivity and Solidarity in Daniel Garrison Brinton, Franz Boas, and Carlos Montezuma
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Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Acknowledgments vii
- Introduction ix
-
Part One. Origins and Erasures: The Emergence of a Boasian Circle
- Chapter 1. Transformation Masks: Recollecting the Indigenous Origins of Global Consciousness 3
- Chapter 2. Franz Boas in Africana Philosophy 42
- Chapter 3. Expressive Enlightenment: Subjectivity and Solidarity in Daniel Garrison Brinton, Franz Boas, and Carlos Montezuma 61
- Chapter 4. “Culture” Crosses the Atlantic: The German Sources of The Mind of Primitive Man 91
-
Part Two. Worlds of Enlightenment: Boasian Thought as Process and Practice
- Chapter 5. Rediscovering the World of Franz Boas: Anthropology, Equality / Diversity, and World Peace 111
- Chapter 6. Of Two Minds About Minding Language in Culture 147
- Chapter 7. Why White People Love Franz Boas; or, The Grammar of Indigenous Dispossession 166
-
Part Three. Routes of Race: The Transnational Networks of Ethnicity
- Chapter 8. Utter Confusion and Contradiction: Franz Boas and the Problem of Human Complexion 185
- Chapter 9. The Death of William Jones: Indian, Anthropologist, Murder Victim 209
- Chapter 10. Woman on the Verge of a Cultural Breakdown: Zora Neale Hurston in Haiti and the Racial Privilege of Boasian Relativism 231
- Chapter 11. “A New Indian Intelligentsia”: Archie Phinney and the Search for a Radical Native American Modernity 258
-
Part Four. Boasiana: The Global Flow of the Culture Concept
- Chapter 12. The River of Salvation Flows Through Africa: Edward Wilmot Blyden, Raphael Armattoe, and the Redemption of the Culture Concept 279
- Chapter 13. A Two- Headed Thinker: Rüdiger Bilden, Gilberto Freyre, and the Reinvention of Brazilian Identity 316
- Chapter 14. Seeing Like an Inca: Julio C. Tello, Indigenous Archaeology, and Pre- Columbian Trepanation in Peru 344
- Contributors 377
- Index 379
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Acknowledgments vii
- Introduction ix
-
Part One. Origins and Erasures: The Emergence of a Boasian Circle
- Chapter 1. Transformation Masks: Recollecting the Indigenous Origins of Global Consciousness 3
- Chapter 2. Franz Boas in Africana Philosophy 42
- Chapter 3. Expressive Enlightenment: Subjectivity and Solidarity in Daniel Garrison Brinton, Franz Boas, and Carlos Montezuma 61
- Chapter 4. “Culture” Crosses the Atlantic: The German Sources of The Mind of Primitive Man 91
-
Part Two. Worlds of Enlightenment: Boasian Thought as Process and Practice
- Chapter 5. Rediscovering the World of Franz Boas: Anthropology, Equality / Diversity, and World Peace 111
- Chapter 6. Of Two Minds About Minding Language in Culture 147
- Chapter 7. Why White People Love Franz Boas; or, The Grammar of Indigenous Dispossession 166
-
Part Three. Routes of Race: The Transnational Networks of Ethnicity
- Chapter 8. Utter Confusion and Contradiction: Franz Boas and the Problem of Human Complexion 185
- Chapter 9. The Death of William Jones: Indian, Anthropologist, Murder Victim 209
- Chapter 10. Woman on the Verge of a Cultural Breakdown: Zora Neale Hurston in Haiti and the Racial Privilege of Boasian Relativism 231
- Chapter 11. “A New Indian Intelligentsia”: Archie Phinney and the Search for a Radical Native American Modernity 258
-
Part Four. Boasiana: The Global Flow of the Culture Concept
- Chapter 12. The River of Salvation Flows Through Africa: Edward Wilmot Blyden, Raphael Armattoe, and the Redemption of the Culture Concept 279
- Chapter 13. A Two- Headed Thinker: Rüdiger Bilden, Gilberto Freyre, and the Reinvention of Brazilian Identity 316
- Chapter 14. Seeing Like an Inca: Julio C. Tello, Indigenous Archaeology, and Pre- Columbian Trepanation in Peru 344
- Contributors 377
- Index 379