Book detail: A Franz Boas Reader: The Shaping of American Anthropology, 1883-1911 is presented as a focused source page for quotations connected with this book, collection, transcript, or source record.
This volume presents selected works from Franz Boas spanning the period 1883 to 1911, a critical era during which anthropology emerged as an academic discipline in the United States. Boas, who emigrated from Germany in the late nineteenth century, challenged prevailing evolutionary and racial theories of human development, instead advocating for historical particularism and empirical fieldwork. His writings in this collection address foundational topics including the study of Native American cultures, linguistic analysis, physical anthropology, and the critique of scientific racism. The book illustrates Boas's methodological innovations, particularly his insistence on learning indigenous languages and documenting cultures through direct observation rather than armchair theorizing. The chronological arrangement allows readers to follow the development of his thought as he established core tenets that would shape American anthropology for generations, including cultural relativism and the principle that environment and history rather than biology determine cultural differences. The volume serves as both an introduction to Boas's intellectual legacy and a documentary record of anthropology's professionalization during a pivotal period in its institutional history.
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