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ID109980
Title ProperInfluence of the people of Puerto Rico project on Mexican anthropology
LanguageENG
AuthorMelville, Roberto
Publication2011.
Summary / Abstract (Note)In the 1970s in Mexico, anthropological regional projects were designed to explore new research interests: irrigation works, peasants, rural capitalism, and mines. Julian H. Steward, Eric R. Wolf, and Sidney W. Mintz, participants in the research project on Puerto Rico, were all popular authors among the new generation of anthropologists and were frequently cited in their thesis bibliographies. This article explores the influence of the People of Puerto Rico project at the design level of these new collective and regional projects. Students were distributed within larger areas, covering various climatic and production subareas, in their research training. The important role of cities, industries, haciendas, markets, and government programs was highlighted. I suggest that senior anthropologists and academic leaders who were planning this new anthropological era were more familiar than their students with the conceptual lines of the Puerto Rico Project. I gained greater insight into the difficulties of a regional research enterprise when I did anthropological research in the 1980s at the Tennessee Valley project.
`In' analytical NoteIdentities: Global Studies in Culture and Power Vol. 18, No.1-3; May-Jun 2011: p.229-233
Journal SourceIdentities: Global Studies in Culture and Power Vol. 18, No.1-3; May-Jun 2011: p.229-233
Key WordsPuerto Rico ;  Area Studies ;  Regional Research ;  Mexican Anthropology