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Anthropology and Politics: Revolutions in the Sacred Grove [Paperback]

Ernest Gellner (Author)

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Book Description

December 12, 1995 0631199187 978-0631199182 1
Ernest Gellner explores here the links between anthropology and politics, and shows just how central these are. The recent postmodernist turn in anthropology has been linked to the expiation of colonial guilt. Traditional, functionalist anthropology is characteristically regarded as an accessory to the crime, and anyone critical of the relativistic claims of interpretative anthropology (as Ernest Gellner is) is likely to be charged (as he sometimes is) with being an ex post imperialist.

Ernest Gellner argues that cultures are crucially important in human life as constraining systems of meaning. Cultural transition means that the required characteristics are transmitted from generation to generation, leading, he shows, to both greater diversity and to far more rapid change than is possible among species where transmission is primarily by genetic means. But the relative importance of semantic and physical compulsion needs to be explored rather than pre-judged. The weakness of idealism, which at present operates under the name of hermeneutics, is that it underplays the importance of coercion, and that it presents cultures as self-justifying and morally sovereign: this line of argument, the author demonstrates, is fundamentally flawed.

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From the Back Cover

Ernest Gellner explores here the links between anthropology and politics, and shows just how central these are. The recent postmodernist turn in anthropology has been linked to the expiation of colonial guilt. Traditional, functionalist anthropology is characteristically regarded as an accessory to the crime, and anyone critical of the relativistic claims of interpretative anthropology (as Ernest Gellner is) is likely to be charged (as he sometimes is) with being an ex post imperialist.

Ernest Gellner argues that cultures are crucially important in human life as constraining systems of meaning. Cultural transition means that the required characteristics are transmitted from generation to generation, leading, he shows, to both greater diversity and to far more rapid change than is possible among species where transmission is primarily by genetic means. But the relative importance of semantic and physical compulsion needs to be explored rather than pre-judged. The weakness of idealism, which at present operates under the name of hermeneutics, is that it underplays the importance of coercion, and that it presents cultures as self-justifying and morally sovereign: this line of argument, the author demonstrates, is fundamentally flawed.

About the Author

Ernest Gellner was Professor of Social Anthropology at the University of Cambridge, before which he had been since 1962 Professor of Philosophy at the London School of Economics. He is now head of research at the Central European University and divides his time between Prague and Cambridge, where he is a Fellow of King's College. His previous books include Nations and Nationalism (1983), The Concept of Kinship (1986), Reason and Culture (1992), Encounters with Nationalism (1994) and Conditions of Liberty (1994).

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
Jean-Paul Sartre's Huis Clos is an account of a triangular situation, in which three characters are so related to each other that each one of them can both thwart another and yet is also doomed to be thwarted.  Read the first page
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Ibn Khaldun, Middle East, Bronislaw Malinowski, Alois Musil, Adam Smith, Cambridge University Press, Emile Durkheim, David Hume, Soviet Union, James Frazer, Old Testament, Ottoman Empire, Robert Musil, Asiatic Mode of Production, East European, Habsburg Empire, Ernst Mach, French Revolution, North African, Oxford University Press, Bertrand Russell, Chain of Being, Clifford Geertz, Karl Marx, Max Weber
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