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Anthropological Quarterly 76.1 (2003) v



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Correction

The last paragraph of the Garth L. Green review of the new release From the Margins: Historical Anthropolgy and Its Futures (AQ, Fall 2002, p. 765) should have read:

O'Brien and Roseberry (1991: 18) conclude that the critical anthropology indicated in their volume is

"motivated by a firm sense that we (including "they") are bound together in a unified set of social political, and cultural processes and struggles that have produced the present and over which we, in concert, must take control if we are to shape a future free of domination. This aspiration, rather than epistemological privilege, is our starting point in the reconstructive endeavor to which this book is devoted."

The project of historical anthropology is not only to persistently question the epistemology, methodologies, and conclusions of historian and anthropologists or of History and Anthropology but to more profoundly understand our current state so that we may change it for the better.



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