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ID109976
Title ProperAnthropological approaches to modern societies in the 1940s
LanguageENG
AuthorSilverman, Sydel
Publication2011.
Summary / Abstract (Note)At the time that Julian Steward was formulating the Puerto Rico Project, several other approaches to complex societies were being pursued by American anthropologists. Beginning in the 1920s, funders'-and subsequently, New Deal agencies'-interest in addressing social problems impelled microcosmic community studies in the United States. That approach, essentially functionalist and ahistorical, was extended to village studies in other countries, and Redfield's folk-urban continuum became the dominant theoretical framework for comprehending regions within nations. Concurrently, acculturation theory legitimized anthropological interests beyond "primitives" and offered an alternative, two-way cultural contact model. With the onset of World War II, the culture and personality approach was applied to strategic nations, providing holistic configurational depictions of national character. Steward's effort can be seen as a critique of, and alternative to, these approaches that were prevalent in the late 1940s. Building upon his method of cultural ecology, his orientation toward work, and his notions about sociocultural integration, he devised a different way of studying a total society. Steward's framework was modified and expanded by members of his team, both in the field and in the writing of the jointly authored book. While slow to have a wider impact, the project-both in its successes and its limitations-signaled new departures for the anthropological study of the modern world.
`In' analytical NoteIdentities: Global Studies in Culture and Power Vol. 18, No.1-3; May-Jun 2011: p.185-193
Journal SourceIdentities: Global Studies in Culture and Power Vol. 18, No.1-3; May-Jun 2011: p.185-193
Key WordsHistory of Anthropology ;  Community Studies ;  Robert Redfield ;  National Character ;  Acculturation ;  Julian Steward ;  Puerto Rico