紹介
Considered the father of modern American anthropology, Franz Boas introduced the relativistic, culture-centered methods and principles of inquiry that continue to dominate the field. This study analyzes the development of his thought and his contributions to radical and ethnic theory in the context of his own ethnicity and personal experience with persecution. The author focuses primarily on Boas's attempt to fuse science with political and social activism - an effort to insure that his ideological contributions to science had practical relevance to the difficult issues facing American society. Hyatt fills in the details of Boas's background, from his early years in Germany to his emigration to the United States in the late 1880s, and discusses his pivotal role in transforming anthropology from an amateur pursuit into a rigorous academic discipline. The author examines Boas's attacks on those who used "science" to promulgate theories of racial inferiority based on alleged differences in mental ability. He traces the origins of Boas's own theories and the use that he made of them in working for equal rights for immigrants and African Americans.
This is a biographical study focusing on the historical meaning of Boas's contributions and the motivating forces that shaped his work.
目次
The early years
the quest for stability
the rise of the professional
the turn of the century
the struggle for racial equality
the confrontation with Nativism
trial by war
the end of an era.