"Fournier's book is an intellectual biography rather than just the biography of an intellectual, and has plenty of value to say about Mauss' ideas."--Terry Eagleton, London Review of Books "Fournier achieves with flying colors the ambitious goals of intellectual biography ... [T]he book is overall very fluid and engaging. It has great potential as a teaching tool and also makes excellent anthropologist bedtime reading."--Evelyn Dean, Anthropological Quarterly
This book is the first intellectual biography of Marcel Mauss (1872-1950), the father of modern ethnology and a leading early figure in the French school of sociology. Mauss left a rich intellectual legacy in the social sciences, influencing the work of Claude Levi-Strauss and others. His masterpiece, the 1925 essay The Gift, on reciprocity and gift economies among archaic societies, remains required reading in anthropology, and his work more broadly resonates today with students and scholars in fields from the history of religion to sociology. Mauss taught the first generation of French field researchers in anthropology and helped secure the legacy of his uncle, emile Durkheim, the founder of modern sociology. In Marcel Mauss: A Biography, Marcel Fournier situates Mauss's ideas in their biographical context, focusing not only on the details of Mauss's life but also on the people and the academic milieus with which he was associated in early twentieth-century France. He shows how Mauss--through his writings, teaching, and socialist politics--found himself at the center of the intellectual and political life of his country and of Europe through two world wars.
The book addresses, among other topics, the effect of the Dreyfus Affair and the First World War on Mauss's thought, and the inner dynamics of the group of scholars around Mauss and Durkheim at the journal they helped establish, Annee Sociologique. The fruit of vast research, Marcel Mauss: A Biography is the life story both of a legendary scholar and of the institutionalization of sociology and anthropology.
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This book is the first intellectual biography of Marcel Mauss (1872-1950), the father of modern ethnology and a leading early figure in the French school of sociology. Mauss left a rich intellectual legacy in the social sciences, influencing the work of Claude Levi-Strauss and others. His masterpiece, the 1925 essay The Gift, on reciprocity and gif
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Introduction 1 PART I: DURKHEIM'S NEPHEW 7 CHAPTER 1: Epinal, Bordeaux, Paris 9 CHAPTER 2: Student at the Ecole Pratique des Hautes Etudes 37 CHAPTER 3: Rites of Institution: Early Publications and Travel Abroad 56 PART II: THE TOTEM AND TABOO CLAN 81 CHAPTER 4: In the Cenacle 85 CHAPTER 5: Citizen Mauss 96 CHAPTER 6: Rue Saint-Jacques 113 CHAPTER 7: Journalist at Humanite 123 CHAPTER 8: Collective Madness 133 CHAPTER 9: A Heated Battle at the College de France: The Loisy Affair 149 CHAPTER 10: Not a Very Funny War 168 PART III: THE HEIR 185 CHAPTER 11: (The Socialist)Life Goes On 189 CHAPTER 12: A Burdensome Inheritance 215 CHAPTER 13: The Institut d'Ethnologie 233 CHAPTER 14: Sociology, a Lost Cause? 246 PART IV: RECOGNITION 259 CHAPTER 15: A Place at the College de France 263 CHAPTER 16: Where Professors Devour One Another 276 CHAPTER 17: Enough to Make You Despair of Politics 303 CHAPTER 18: The Time of Myths 315 EPILOGUE: The War and Postwar Years 333 Notes 351 Index 427
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"Fournier's book is an intellectual biography rather than just the biography of an intellectual, and has plenty of value to say about Mauss' ideas."--Terry Eagleton, London Review of Books "Fournier achieves with flying colors the ambitious goals of intellectual biography ... [T]he book is overall very fluid and engaging. It has great potential as a teaching tool and also makes excellent anthropologist bedtime reading."--Evelyn Dean, Anthropological Quarterly
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"This book captures the intricacies of the person and oeuvre of Marcel Mauss, whose impact has not subsided nor should it. Mauss's work and example deserve consideration by anyone intent on challenging easy economistic approaches to social practices, historical dynamics, cultural life, and religious observation. Mauss is a model for resisting reductionism."—James A. Boon, Professor of Anthropology, Princeton University, author of Verging on Extra-vagance: Anthropology, History, Religion, Literature, Arts . . . ShowbizPraise for the original, French edition: "Fournier's book is by far the most informed and comprehensive study of Mauss yet to appear in any language. It is an indispensable source of information about Mauss and his colleagues and no student of the Durkheimians or Durkheimian sociology can do without it. For all those who wish to understand the lives and intellectual context of Durkheim and the Durkheimians and of Mauss in particular, and who do not read French, an English translation of this work will prove of great value."—Steven Lukes, New York University, author of Émile Durkheim: His Life and WorkPraise for the original, French edition: "Absolutely fascinating. Mauss is a much talked about figure-by anthropologists, by historians of the French Third Republic and the Vichy regime, and by scholars of Jewish history."—Natalie Zemon Davis, Professor Emeritus of History, Princeton University, author of The Gift in Sixteenth-Century France
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780691168074
Publisert
2015-07-28
Utgiver
Vendor
Princeton University Press
Vekt
482 gr
Høyde
235 mm
Bredde
152 mm
Aldersnivå
P, U, 06, 05
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
448
Forfatter
Oversetter