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Historical Transformations: The Anthropology of Global Systems

(Paperback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

Historical Transformations: The Anthropology of Global Systems

Contributors:

By (Author) Kajsa Ekholm Friedman
By (author) Jonathan Friedman

ISBN:

9780759111110

Publisher:

AltaMira Press

Imprint:

AltaMira Press

Publication Date:

9th December 2011

Country:

United States

Classifications

Readership:

Tertiary Education

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Main Subject:
Dewey:

303.4

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Paperback

Number of Pages:

330

Dimensions:

Width 152mm, Height 229mm

Weight:

535g

Description

Historical Transformations represents the work of two distinguished anthropologists over three decades on the history and importance of global thinking in the social sciences. The authors consider numerous examples for which local phenomena can only be understood within the contexts of global systems. Their multidisciplinary work touches on many aspects of social and individual life as well as long-term historical processes.

Reviews

In these essays, the authors critique materialist, evolutionary, elitist, and development theoretical approaches in archaeology and anthropology. It is most relevant for professional readers interested in the history of systems theory and Marxist discussions of capital and social reproduction. * Choice Reviews *
Historical Transformations includes appraisals of Marxist, cultural materialist, and neo-evolutionary approaches to understanding modern and postmodern realms. It offers especially trenchant criticisms of most globalization theories, suggesting that they are largely biased ruminations of global elites. Yet out of the ruins of such questionable theory, Ekholm Friedman and Friedman formulate their own global systems theory. Drawing on only a few conceptsof which logic, social reproduction, and transformational analysis are most prominentthey craft an understanding of the world in which Bronze Age empires, Oceanic Big Man politics, Congolese kinship and witchcraft culture, and the postmodern West are explained by transformational analysis. In the end, the authors suggest that the postmodern world in which we live is one at the 'end of empire' when history has taken on a 'Kafkaesque quality.' -- Stephen Reyna, University of Manchester

Author Bio

Kajsa Ekholm Friedman is professor in the Department of Social Anthropology at Lund University, Sweden.

Jonathan Friedman is directeur d'tudes at the Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales, in Paris, and professor of social anthropology at Lund University.

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