The Invention of Culture

The Invention of Culture

The Invention of Culture

The Invention of Culture

Paperback(Second Edition)

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Overview

In anthropology, a field that is known for its critical edge and intellectual agility, few books manage to maintain both historical value and contemporary relevance. Roy Wagner's The Invention of Culture, originally published in 1975, is one.
 
Wagner breaks new ground by arguing that culture arises from the dialectic between the individual and the social world. Rooting his analysis in the relationships between invention and convention, innovation and control, and meaning and context, he builds a theory that insists on the importance of creativity, placing people-as-inventors at the heart of the process that creates culture. In an elegant twist, he shows that this very process ultimately produces the discipline of anthropology itself.
 
Tim Ingold’s foreword to the new edition captures the exhilaration of Wagner’s book while showing how the reader can journey through it and arrive safely—though transformed—on the other side.
 

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780226423289
Publisher: University of Chicago Press
Publication date: 11/21/2016
Edition description: Second Edition
Pages: 208
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 8.90(h) x 0.60(d)

About the Author

Roy Wagner is professor of anthropology at the University of Virginia. Tim Ingold is chair of social anthropology at the University of Aberdeen.
 

Table of Contents

Foreword to the Second Edition
Preface to the Second Edition
Acknowledgments
IntroductionChapter 1: The Assumption of Culture
The idea of culture
Making culture visible
The invention of cultureChapter 2: Culture as Creativity
Fieldwork is work in the field
The ambiguity of “culture”
The wax museum
“Road belong culture”Chapter 3: The Power of Invention
Invention is culture
Control
The necessity of invention
The magic of advertisingChapter 4: The Invention of Self
An important message for you about the makers of time
Learning personality
On “doing your own thing”: The world of immanent humanity
Learning humanityChapter 5: The Invention of Society
Cultural “change”: Social convention as inventive flow
The invention of language
The invention of society
The rise of civilizationsChapter 6: The Invention of Anthropology
The allegory of man
Controlling culture
Controlling nature
The end of synthetic anthropology
Index
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