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Culture, 1922: The Emergence of a Concept

(Paperback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

Culture, 1922: The Emergence of a Concept

Contributors:

By (Author) Marc Manganaro

ISBN:

9780691001371

Publisher:

Princeton University Press

Imprint:

Princeton University Press

Publication Date:

6th January 2003

Country:

United States

Classifications

Readership:

Professional and Scholarly

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Other Subjects:

Social and cultural anthropology
Cultural studies

Dewey:

809.04

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Paperback

Number of Pages:

248

Dimensions:

Width 152mm, Height 235mm

Weight:

340g

Description

Culture, 1922 traces the intellectual and institutional deployment of the culture concept in England and America in the first half of the twentieth century. With primary attention to how models of culture are created, elaborated upon, transformed, resisted, and ignored, Marc Manganaro works across disciplinary lines to embrace literary, literary critical, and anthropological writing. Tracing two traditions of thinking about culture, as elite products and pursuits and as common and shared systems of values, Manganaro argues that these modernist formulations are not mutually exclusive and have indeed intermingled in complex and interesting ways throughout the development of literary studies and anthropology. Beginning with the important Victorian architects of culture - Matthew Arnold and Edward Tylor - the book follows a number of main figures, schools, and movements up to 1950, such as anthropologist Franz Boas, his disciples Edward Sapir, Ruth Benedict, and Zora Neale Hurston, literary modernists T.S. Eliot and James Joyce, functional anthropologist Bronislaw Malinowski, modernist literary critic I.A. Richards, the New Critics, and Kenneth Burke. The main focus here, however, is upon three works published in 1922, the watershed year of Modernism - Eliot's The Waste Land, Malinowski's Argonauts of the Western Pacific, and Joyce's Ulysses. Manganaro reads these masterworks and the history of their reception as efforts toward defining culture. This is a wide-ranging and ambitious study about an ambiguous and complex concept as it moves within and between disciplines.

Reviews

"This is an excellent, original, well-written book. It makes a significant contribution to the history of both Modernism and of the concept of culture--as well as to the interpretation of some of the most consequential works of the interwar period. A most important work."--Clifford Geertz, author of Available Light: Anthropological Reflections of Philosophical Topics

Author Bio

Marc Manganaro is Associate Professor of English at Rutgers University-New Brunswick. He is the author of "Myth, Rhetoric, and the Voice of Authority" and editor of "Modernist Anthropology: From Fieldwork to Text" (Princeton).

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