A Maverick Boasian: The Life and Work of Alexander A. Goldenweiser

A Maverick Boasian: The Life and Work of Alexander A. Goldenweiser

by Sergei Kan
A Maverick Boasian: The Life and Work of Alexander A. Goldenweiser

A Maverick Boasian: The Life and Work of Alexander A. Goldenweiser

by Sergei Kan

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Overview

A Maverick Boasian explores the often contradictory life of Alexander Goldenweiser (1880–1940), a scholar considered by his contemporaries to be Franz Boas’s most brilliant and most favored student. The story of his life and scholarship is complex and exciting as well as frustrating. Although Goldenweiser came to the United States from Russia as a young man, he spent the next forty years thinking of himself as a European intellectual who never felt entirely at home. A talented ethnographer, he developed excellent rapport with his Native American consultants but cut short his fieldwork due to lack of funds. An individualist and an anarchist in politics, he deeply resented having to compromise any of his ideas and freedoms for the sake of professional success. A charming man, he risked his career and family life to satisfy immediate needs and wants.

A number of his books and papers on the relationship between anthropology and other social sciences helped foster an important interdisciplinary conversation that continued for decades after his death. For the first time, Sergei Kan brings together and examines all of Goldenweiser’s published scholarly works, archival records, personal correspondences, nonacademic publications, and living memories from several of Goldenweiser’s descendants.

Goldenweiser attracted attention for his unique progressive views on such issues as race, antisemitism, immigration, education, pacifism, gender, and individual rights. His was a major voice in a chorus of progressive Boasians who applied the insights of their discipline to a variety of questions on the American public’s mind. Many of the battles he fought are still with us today.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781496234414
Publisher: Nebraska
Publication date: 02/01/2023
Series: Critical Studies in the History of Anthropology
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 282
File size: 1 MB

About the Author

Sergei Kan is a professor of anthropology at Dartmouth College. He is the author or editor of several books, including New Perspectives on Native North America: Cultures, Histories, and Representations (Nebraska, 2006), Sharing Our Knowledge: The Tlingit and Their Coastal Neighbors (Nebraska, 2015), and Lev Shternberg: Anthropologist, Russian Socialist, Jewish Activist (Nebraska, 2009).
 

Table of Contents

List of Illustrations
Acknowledgements
Series Editors’ Preface
Introduction
Chapter 1. The Russian Beginning and the Early American Years
Chapter 2. Early Scholarship, the Iroquois Fieldwork, and Columbia
Chapter 3. The New School, Academic and Popular Writing, and a Devastating Divorce
Chapter 4. The West Coast Exile
Chapter 5. The End
Notes
Bibliography
Index
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