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Aboriginal Woman: Male and Female Anthropological Perspectives

  • RUBY ROHRLICH-LEAVITT , BARBARA SYKES and ELIZABETH WEATHERFORD
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The Politics of Anthropology
This chapter is in the book The Politics of Anthropology

Chapters in this book

  1. I-IV I
  2. General Editor's Preface V
  3. SECTION ONE: Introduction
  4. Anthropology and Politics: From Naivete Toward Liberation? 3
  5. SECTION TWO: Colonialism in Anthropology
  6. The Counterrevolutionary Tradition in African Studies: The Case of Applied Anthropology 45
  7. Anthropologists and Their Terminologies: A Critical Review 67
  8. Anthropology and the Colonial Encounter 85
  9. SECTION THREE: Sexism in Anthropology
  10. Viricentrism and Anthropology 97
  11. Aboriginal Woman: Male and Female Anthropological Perspectives 117
  12. Women, Development, and Anthropological Facts and Fictions 131
  13. SECTION FOUR: "Ethical Question" or "Political Choice"?
  14. Colonial and Postcolonial Anthropology of Africa: Scholarship or Sentiment? 145
  15. Social Reality and the Anthropologists 161
  16. The Relevance of Contemporary Economic Anthropology 171
  17. Notes on the Present-Day State of Anthropology in the Third World 187
  18. Anthropology = Ideology, Applied Anthropology = Politics 201
  19. SECTION FIVE: From "Academic Colonialism" to "Committed Anthropology"
  20. The Social Responsibility of Anthropological Science in the Context of Contemporary Brazil 215
  21. The Meaning of Wounded Knee, 1973: Indian Self-Government and the Role of Anthropology 227
  22. From Applied to Committed Anthropology: Disengaging from our Colonialist Heritage 259
  23. SECTION SIX: Dilemmas of Action Research and Commitment
  24. Anthropology, "Snooping," and Commitment: A View from Papua New Guinea 269
  25. Anthropology in Melanesia: Retrospect and Prospect 275
  26. Is Useful Action Research Possible? 281
  27. How Can Revolutionary Anthropology Be Practiced? 291
  28. The Role of the Anthropologist in Minority Education: The Chicano Case 297
  29. SECTION SEVEN: Toward a View from Below and from Within
  30. Participant Observation or Partisan Participation? 309
  31. On Objectivity in Fieldwork 319
  32. Breaking Through the Looking Glass: The View from Below 325
  33. On Being a Native Anthropologist 343
  34. Ethnology in a Revolutionary Setting 353
  35. SECTION EIGHT: Attempts at Liberation Anthropology
  36. On the Participant Study of Women's Movements: Methodological, Definitional and Action Considerations 373
  37. Research-Through-Action: Some Practical Experiences with Peasant Organization 395
  38. Anthropology of the Multinational Corporation 421
  39. Nationalism, Race-Class Consciousness, Action Research on Bougainville Island, Papua New Guinea 447
  40. Research from Within and from Below: Reversing the Machinery 461
  41. APPENDIX: Foundations on the Move
  42. Foundations on the Move 481
  43. Biographical Notes 495
  44. Index of Names 503
  45. Index of Subjects 511
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