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Participant observerParticipant observer

Participant observer

Fox, Robin

About this book

"Robin Fox, one of the preeminent anthropologists of our time, takes us on an exuberant personal, intellectual and cultural journey through the 1930s to the 1970s. Fox's method is to depend entirely on memory to select the people, events, and ideas that have driven him towards what was called at the time a "revolution in the social sciences." This revolution was the founding of the biosocial, or what came to be called the sociobiological, movement in the study of human behavior. It was a long road peppered with strange events, brain-bending ideas, odd adventures, dangers and sorrows, and a cast of lively, often eccentric characters." "He witnessed the last of the old steam and horse-powered northern wool towns of the industrial revolution and the pre-industrial Hardy countryside of southern England. He saw the ancient grammar schools before their destruction by doctrinaire socialism; the old LSE when it was still an international family, not just a big college; the brave but failed experiment that was Talcott Parsons' Social Relations Department at Harvard. He witnessed the innocent but troubled America of the 1950s and the last gasp of traditional Indian life in New Mexico. He lived in genteel Jane Austen England in Devon and experienced the still all-male college at Rutgers, as well as peasant-crofter life in the Irish islands."--BOOK JACKET.

Details

OL Work ID
OL85314W

Subjects

AnthropologistsBiographyUnited states, biographyAnthropologuesBiographies

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Book data from Open Library. Cover images courtesy of Open Library.