• Frederick Starr Popularizer of Anthropology, Public Intellectual, and Genuine Eccentric

Frederick Starr Popularizer of Anthropology, Public Intellectual, and Genuine Eccentric

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Overview

This definitive, detail-packed biography is the first of Frederick Starr (1856-1933), a founding father of American anthropology at the University of Chicago. It presents a major reevaluation of Starr’s place as the missionizer of anthropology, illuminates the consequences of the professionalization of anthropology, and yields a greater understanding of the United States as it moved into a position of global power. Donald McVicker considers Frederick Starr’s colorful life in the context of the times. In many respects Starr’s early career paralleled that of Franz Boas, “the architect of American anthropology.” Nonetheless, as Boas led professional anthropology into the twentieth century in the United States, Starr, the popularizer, increasingly fell behind. Today, if Starr is remembered at all, he is usually described in terms of his intellectual, professional, and ethical failings. Yet his collections, publications, and photographic and paper archives provide a rich set of resources for archaeologists, ethnologists, folklorists, and historians. McVicker argues that Starr’s mission to bring anthropology to the public and enlighten them was as valid a goal during his career as was Boas’s goal to professionalize the field.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780759120976
ISBN-10: 0759120978
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Publication date: 2012-11-08
Pages: 407
Product dimensions: Height: 9.21 Inches, Length: 6.29 Inches, Weight: 1.79015356744 Pounds, Width: 1.51 Inches
Author: Donald McVicker
Language: en
Binding: Hardcover

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