<p>After decades of work in Africa, Jean-Loup Amselle, one of France's most creative social anthropologists, has developed a strikingly original genealogy of France's contemporary original multiculturalism.... In his championing of a republican renewal, Amselle joins other French anthropologists and sociologists, whose own natural-law origins trump any relativist leanings when they have called for a ban on headscarves in schools and questioned France's recent turn to 'positive discrimination'.... In Amselle's (and others') 'republican turn' we are reminded of the strikingly different political philosophies that underlie our social sciences. When read as a political critique, colonial history, and disciplinary genealogy, Amselle's work wonderfully remarker the landscape of the engage anthropology of contemporary France.</p>
- John R. Bowen, Washington University, Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute
Produktdetaljer
Om bidragsyterne
Jean-Loup Amselle is Directeur d'etudes a l'ecole des Hautes etudes en Sciences Sociales and the author of many books, including Mestizo Logics: Anthropology of Identity in Africa and Elsewhere. Jane Marie Todd is the translator of five books published by Cornell, most recently What Ought I to Do? Morality in Kant and Levinas by Catherine Chalier.