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Contents
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Contents List of Illustrations ix Series Editor’s Introduction xi Introduction xv PART 1: Anthropology and Some of Its Companions INTRODUCTION: Before the Boasians 3 1. Historical Inferences from Ethnohistorical Data: Boasian Views 15 2. The Manufacture of Linguistic Structure 22 3. Margaret Mead and the Professional Unpopularity of Popularizers 31 4. American Anthropologists Discover Peasants 52 5. The Non-eclipse of Americanist Anthropology during the 1930s and 1940s 88 6. The Pre-Freudian Georges Devereux, the Post-Freudian Alfred Kroeber, and Mohave Sexuality 102 7. University of California, Berkeley, Anthropology during the 1950s 114 8. American Anthropologists Looking through Taiwan to See “Traditional” China, 1950–1990, with Keelung Hong 122 PART 2: Sociology’s Increasingly Uneasy Relations with Anthropology INTRODUCTION 157 9. W. I. Thomas, Behaviorist Ethnologist 161 10. The Postmaturity of Sociolinguistics: Edward Sapir and Personality Studies in the Chicago Department of Sociology 172 11. The Reception of Anthropological Work in American Sociology, 1921–1951 194 12. The Rights of Research Assistants and the Rhetoric of Political Suppression: Morton Grodzins and the University of California Japanese-American Evacuation and Resettlement Study 211 13. Resistance to Sociology at Berkeley 246 14. Does Editing Core Anthropology and Sociology Journals Increase Citations to the Editor? 264 Conclusion: Doing History of Anthropology 273 Acknowledgments 289 Notes 295 References 317 Index 363 ...