Lexington Books
Pages: 266
Trim: 6½ x 9⅜
978-1-4985-0763-9 • Hardback • April 2016 • $123.00 • (£95.00)
978-1-4985-0765-3 • Paperback • September 2017 • $57.99 • (£45.00)
978-1-4985-0764-6 • eBook • April 2016 • $55.00 • (£42.00)
Glynn Custred is professor emeritus of anthropology at California State University, East Bay.
Introduction
Chapter 1: The Second Scientific Revolution
Chapter 2: European Origins in an Age of Science
Chapter 3: One Discipline, Three Ways
Chapter 4: American Anthropology in the Nineteenth Century
Chapter 5: What is Science?
Chapter 6: Converging Sciences
Chapter 7: American Anthropology and the Formation of the Scientific Holistic Approach
Chapter 8: Physical Anthropology
Chapter 9: Archeology
Chapter 10: Sociocultural Anthropology
Chapter 11: The Theoretical Diversity of Sociocultural Anthropology
Chapter 12: Anthropology as Social Science
Chapter 13: Anthropology and the Humanities
Chapter 14: Linguistic Anthropology
Chapter 15: Culture Areas: The Case of the Central Andes
Chapter 16: An Andean Ethnographic Experience
Epilogue: A Holistic Science
Bibliography
About the Author
This is a deeply 'foursquare,' unoriginal history of the discipline of four field American anthropology, from its rise in the 19th century to its intellectual climax from the mid through the late 20th century. This straightforwardness defines the book's primary usefulness as a teaching tool in introductory courses. Regardless of personal passion or version of the telling of American anthropology's history in terms of current stakes, teachers can easily work with this text with its clear prose and coverage of physical anthropology, archaeology, sociocultural anthropology, linguistic anthropology, culture areas, and holism. Deeply imbued with a certain historical faith and pleasure in the discipline, the book blessedly refrains from being too preachy or annoyed with recent 'turns.' The discipline as a whole has given what Custred has needed to be a first-rate Andeanist. But what of the many anthropologists today who define themselves outside the traditional 'culture areas'? They can still learn much from this book. Summing Up: Recommended. All levels/libraries.
— Choice Reviews
The book is highly readable and clearly argued, offering broad coverage of a plethora of authors, theories, schools, and fieldwork in four national traditions.... I found Glynn Custred’s book both enjoyable and provocative.... [H]is history of the holistic ideal in anthropology is...a welcome contribution to the reflexive awareness of the historicity and theory-laden character of knowledge, an awareness which is essential to the anthropologists’s training and trade. As a plea for the holistic ideal the book also constitutes relevant early 21st-century source material for epistemological analysis itself.
— Anthropos
Custred provides a remarkably broad and deep history of anthropology. In response to those who call for a split between the traditional four-fields of anthropology, Custred demonstrates that, from its very beginnings, the most important anthropology has been done by scholars who practiced in a four-field framework. Custred shows that even some of the more humanistically-oriented anthropologists have made the argument that anthropology must be a holistic discipline. It is a strong work, and deserves a prominent place in courses on the history of anthropology.
— Peter Peregrine, Lawrence University
It is with commendable clarity and economy of exposition that this work encompasses anthropology's unique eclectic character and far-reaching breadth of focus. The author's purview ranges from the discipline's roots in European intellectual thought and the Second Scientific Revolution to its contemporary topical and theoretical diversity. Drawing on his own field research in the highlands of Peru, Dr. Custred provides the reader with a tangible sense of immediacy and a vivid and intimate example of the ethnographic experience.
— Andrei Simic, University of Southern California
In a time when the theoretical and mythological approaches in anthropology appear to have the aim of fragmenting anthropology, Glynn Custred’s A History of Anthropology as a Holistic Science traces the epistemological history of holism that binds anthropology as one discipline.
— Douglas W. Hume, Northern Kentucky University; Treasurer, Society for Anthropological Sciences