Notes on the Contributors

Notes on the Contributors ◆◆◆◆◆ Ana Isabel Afonso is assistant professor at the Department of Anthropology (Universidade Nova de Lisboa FCSH/UNL), wh...
4 downloads 2 Views 90KB Size
Notes on the Contributors ◆◆◆◆◆

Ana Isabel Afonso is assistant professor at the Department of Anthropology (Universidade Nova de Lisboa FCSH/UNL), where she teaches methodology and conducts a research seminar. She did fieldwork in a peasant community in the northeast of Portugal and coordinated a research team that carried out an anthropological study of a public rehousing development near Lisbon. She has just begun a research project on gypsies in Portugal. Her research interests include social change, kinship, family and power relations. She is currently preparing her PhD thesis on social changes in a Portuguese parish between 1944 and 1994 (Sendim em dois tempos: 1944–1994) for publication. Alexandra Bitusikova graduated in ethnology at the Comenius University and received her PhD at the Institute of Ethnology, Slovak Academy of Sciences, in Bratislava (Slovakia). In 1991 she became a research fellow at the Institute of Social and Cultural Studies, in the Faculty of Humanities of Matej Bel University in Banska Bystrica, and later its director. She is the author of a series of publications focusing mainly on urban anthropology, post-Communist social and cultural change in Slovakia, as well as identities and minorities. She currently works as a researcher and lecturer in Brussels. Dmitri Bondarenko is the acting head of the anthropology department at the Centre for Civilisation and Regional Studies of the Russian Academy of Sciences in Moscow. His research interests include the anthropology of complex societies and the anthropology of tropical Africa. He is the author of about 100 publications, including three monographs. Ivo Budil is associate professor of Sociology at the University of West Bohemia in Pilsen and at the Charles University in Prague. He received his MA (1990) and PhD (1994) from Charles University; served as head of department of Social and Cultural Anthropology at the University of West Bohemia in Pilsen; and was elected Dean of the Faculty of Humanities of the University of West Bohemia in 1999. His publications include articles on the history of anthropological and sociological theory and on glottogenesis. He

248 ◆ Notes on the Contributors

is the author of two books: Myth, Language and Cultural Anthropology (1998) and Beyond the Horizon of the West: Development of the Anthropological Thinking from Isidor of Seville to Franz Boas (2001). Graça Índias Cordeiro is assistant professor at the Department of Anthropology (Instituto Superior de Ciências do Trabalho e da Empresa, ISCTE, Lisbon), where she has taught anthropology courses in different programmes (anthropology, sociology, economics, architecture) since 1984. She graduated in Anthropology at the Universidade Nova de Lisboa (FCSH/UNL); specialised in urban anthropology and did ethnographic research in Lisbon; carried out fieldwork on popular culture, leisure practices, ritual festivities, volunteer associations, occupational groups, urban symbolism and territorial identity. Her monograph Um lugar na cidade (1997) is based on her PhD dissertation about the social and cultural construction of a ‘typical’ Lisbon neighbourhood. Dorle Dracklé is professor of social anthropology and intercultural studies at the University of Bremen, Germany. She did fieldwork in Portugal on the elite, bureaucracy, culture, corruption, economy and the European Union. Her research interests include media, science and technology studies, economy, politics and policy. Recent publications include: The Rhetorics of Crisis: On the Cultural Poetics of Politics, Bureaucracy and Virtual Economy in Southern Portugal (forthcoming), Images of Death (ed., 2001, with CD-ROM); and various articles, for example, on media anthropology, life course and suicide. Iain R. Edgar lectures in the Department of Anthropology at Durham University. He completed his PhD in Sociology and Social Anthropology at the University of Keele, U.K., in 1995. In his study of meaning-making in dreamwork groups in the U.K., published in Dreamwork, Anthropology and the Caring Professions: A Cultural Approach to Dreamwork (1995), he introduced the use of several experiential groupwork methods as research methods, including imagework. He is currently writing an imagework research methodology book. Thomas Fillitz is currently professor at the Institute for Social and Cultural Anthropology of the University of Vienna. He did fieldwork in Northern Nigeria, Ivory Coast and Benin. His research interests include the anthropology of art, globalisation and political anthropology. His recent work includes: Zeitgenössische Kunst in Afrika. Vierzehn Gegenwartskünstler aus Côte d’Ivoire und Bénin ( forthcoming); and articles on: Intellectual Elites and the Production of Ideology and The Notion of Art – Regional or General Comparison (forthcoming). Gérald Gaillard is associate professor at the University of Lille 1 and a member of the research institute for Social Dynamics and Ethnic Mobilisation. He wrote a PhD thesis on Images d’une génération. Contribution à l’histoire de

Notes on the Contributors ◆ 249

l’anthropologie française de ces trente dernières années (1988) and is author of more than twenty articles and memoranda on psychoanalytic questions, the history of anthropology, development sociology and the ethnology and history of the societies of Guinea Conakry and Guinea Bissau. He has also published the Répertoire de l’ethnologie française (1990) and the Dictionnaire des anthropologues et des ethnologues (1997). He edited Migrations anciennes et peuplement actuel des Côtes guinéennes (2000). Ulf Hannerz is professor of Social Anthropology at Stockholm University, Sweden. He has taught at several American, European and Australian universities and is a former Chair of the European Association of Social Anthropologists. His research has been especially in urban anthropology, media anthropology and transnational cultural processes, and his most recent books in English are Cultural Complexity (1992) and Transnational Connections (1996). He is the anthropology editor for the International Encyclopedia of the Social and Behavioral Sciences (2001). Peter Hervik is a lecturer at the Department of Social Anthropology, University of Oslo. He did his PhD on the basis of fieldwork among the Yucatec Maya of Mexico, about the articulation between local and external categorisations of Maya identity. His research also deals with the perception and representations of immigrants and refugees in Denmark. His publications include Social Experience and Anthropological Knowledge (1994) with Kirsten Hastrup, Mayan Lives Within and Beyond Boundaries (1999) and Den generende forskellighed (1999). Wim Hoogbergen is senior lecturer in Caribbean History and Anthropology at the Faculty of Social Sciences (Department of Cultural Anthropology) at Utrecht University, the Netherlands. He is managing editor of Oso, Tijdschrift voor Surinaamse Taal-, Letterkunde, Cultuur en Geschiedenis, and the Bronnen voor de Studie van Suriname and editor of the New West Indian Guide Nieuwe West-Indische Gids. His recent publications are: Born out of Resistance: On Caribbean Cultural Creativity (ed. 1995), Het kamp van Broos en Kaliko: De geschiedenis van een Afro-Surinaamse familie (1996), Probresa, ban atak’é; een sociaal-economische diagnose van de armoede op Curaçao. (1999, et al.). Andrey V. Korotayev is professor of anthropology and director of the Centre for Cultural Anthropology at the School of Economics of the Moscow State University, and a Professor of anthropology at the Russian State University for the Humanities (Moscow). His research focuses on social evolution, cross-cultural research and anthropology in the Arab world. He is the author of over 140 publications, including six monographs. László Kürti received his doctorate from the University of Massachusetts in 1989. He taught at the American University, in Washington DC, and at the

250 ◆ Notes on the Contributors

Eotvos Loránd University in Budapest. His research interests include political anthropology, transnationalism, interethnic relations, gender, visual anthropology and youth culture. His articles have been published in Anthropology Today, East European Societies and Politics, Social Anthropology, Ethnos, and Current Anthropology. He has coedited Ethnicity, Religion and Nationhood (1998), Beyond Borders (1997) and wrote The Remote Borderland: Transylvania in the Hungarian Imagination (2001). Currently, he is the Chair of the Department of Political Science, University of Miskolc, Hungary, and Secretary of the European Association of Social Anthropologists. Nana Meladze received her PhD in 1991 from the Supreme Committee of the USSR, Moscow, defending her dissertation at the Institute of History and Ethnography of the Georgian Academy of Sciences. Her dissertation topic was Nineteenth Century English Traveller’s Narrative Stories as a Source for the Cultural Study of Georgia. She later joined the Institute of Ethnology and Anthropology at the Russian Academy of Sciences as an affiliated research fellow. During the last few years she conducted research in Western Europe, residing in the Netherlands. Her publications include articles on: Dispute Resolution in the Caucasus Mountains. (2001), Notes on Svanetian Folk Medicine (1996) and, with Stuart S. Nagel, on Folk Interpretation of Dreams (1997). Vintila Mihailescu graduated in psychology (1974) and received his PhD in Ethnopsychology (1993) from the University of Bucharest. He is professor and head of the MA Programme in Anthropology at the National School of Political Sciences and Administration, Bucharest. He is president of the Romanian Society of Cultural Anthropology. His research interests include cognitive anthropology, community studies, identity and ethnicity. His main publications are: En/Quaite d’identité (ed. 1993), ROMANIA – La construction d’une nation (1995), Fascinatia diferentei (1999) and Socio-hai-hui; O alta sociologie a tranzitiei (2000). David Mills is Leverhulme Research Fellow in the Department of Cultural Studies and Sociology at Birmingham, and is writing a political history of postwar British anthropology. He is also Anthropology Network coordinator of the National Centre for Learning and Teaching Sociology, Anthropology and Politics (C-SAP), which aims to research, promote and share developments in learning and teaching in the three disciplines in the United Kingdom. Janusz Mucha is professor at the Institute of Sociology, Nicholas Copernicus University in Torun, Poland. His research interests include: ethnicity, minority relations, cultural domination, the history of social anthropology, the history of sociology and sociological theory. He has recently published: Mirrors and Windows: Essays in the History of Sociology (ed. et al. 2001), Dominant Culture as a Foreign Culture (ed. forthcoming).

Notes on the Contributors ◆ 251

Rajko Muršič, PhD, teaches courses on the Introduction to Methodology, Contemporary Theories of Culture and Society, and Popular Culture at the Department of Ethnology and Cultural Anthropology, University of Ljubljana, Slovenia. He is also engaged in teaching on selected topics from contemporary ethnological methodology at the postgraduate level. He is editor of the departmental book series Županičeva knjižnica/Županič’s Collection. His research interests include: the methodology of anthropology (ethnology), the anthropology of music, ethnographic studies of micro-cultures, subcultures and popular culture, cultural studies, theories of science and political anthropology. He has published the following books: Neubesedljive zvočne igre (Non-verbal Sound Games: From Philosophy toward Anthropology of Music, 1993), CZD: Etnološki oris rock skupine (CZD: An Ethnological Outline of the Rock Group, 1995), V sen sem jih videl (In Dreams I Saw Them, 1999), Trate vaše in naše mladosti: zgodba o vaškem mladinskem in rock klubu (Trate: The Story of a Youth and Rock Club, 2000), and he has edited several books on didactics and the Mediterranean Ethnological Summer Schools (MESS). Panayotis Panopoulos was born in Athens (Greece) in 1967. He studied education at the University of Athens and social anthropology at the University of the Aegean in Mytilene. He received his PhD from the Department of Social Anthropology at the University of the Aegean in 1998. He is currently teaching anthropology at the Department of Philosophy and Social Studies of the University of Crete and doing research about the ethnography of sound. Thomas K. Schippers has studied anthropology in France at the Université de Provence in Aix en Provence and at the Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales in Paris (PhD 1983). He has done fieldwork in the south of France, the Italian Alps and French Guyana. His research interests range from ethno-sciences and ecology (pastoralism, time perception, anthropology of space) to the methods and concepts of European anthropology (ethnocartography, history of national anthropological schools, ethnovocabulary). He has been teaching anthropology at various levels and to various audiences since 1984 at the Université de Provence and the Université de Nice. Apart from his research-related publications, he has recently published papers in the field of teaching anthropology in Diogenes (1999) and Anthropology in Action (2001). Pier Paolo Viazzo is professor of social anthropology at the University of Turin (Italy). He has studied history and humanities at the University of Turin and social anthropology at University College London (PhD 1983). Most of his research was done in the Western Alps and has a historical anthropological perspective. He is the author of several books, including Upland Communities: Environment, Population and Social Structure in the Alps since the Sixteenth Century (1989) and Introduzione all’antropologia storica (2000). He is coeditor of The Decline of Infant and Child Mortality: The European Experience, 1750–1990 (1997).

252 ◆ Notes on the Contributors

Barbara Waldis received her PhD from the University of Fribourg (Switzerland) in 1997 and teaches as maître assistante at the Institut d‘Ethnologie of the Université de Neuchâtel. After fieldwork in Switzerland and Tunisia, she is now doing research in Switzerland for a documentary film on binational couples. She is also involved in a project on interethnic tolerance and conflict in Bulgaria. Her recent publications include: Trotz der Differenz: Interkulturelle Kommunikation bei maghrebinisch-europäischen Paarbeziehungen in der Schweiz und in Tunesien (1998), Home of the wandering souls (film 1999, with Sándor Horváth), Mariages tous azimuts: Approche pluridisciplinaire des couples binationaux (ed. et al. 2000).

General Index ◆◆◆◆◆

A admission requirements in Denmark, 43 in Germany, 64 in Netherlands, 25 in Norway, 42–43, 44 ‘amoral familiarism’, 189 Amsterdam, University of (UvA), 25, 28, 29, 30, 31, 32 Amsterdam, University of (VU), 25, 28, 29, 30, 31, 32 anthropologia/ethnologia divide (Italy), 182–84, 188–89 archaeology, relation to ethnology, 84 ASA (Association of Anthropologists), 8, 9, 11, 14, 16–17 ‘at home’ anthropology in Czech Republic, 95, 98 in Georgia, 225 in Greece, 199, 200, 201–2 in Italy, 183, 187, 189 in Poland, 84, 90 in Romania, 208–18 in Russia, 243 in Slovakia, 71 in Slovenia, 118–19, 120 Athens, Pantio University, 196, 199, 200 audit culture, 18–20 Austria development of anthropology in, 103–7 overview of higher education, 103

B bachelor programmes in Czech Republic, 100 in Poland, 83 in Portugal, 72–3, 174–75 in Sovakia, 74–75, 76 in Slovenia, 119, 131 in Switzerland, 14 see also curriculum Banska Byrstrica, Inst. Of Social & Cultural Studies, 77 Basel, University of, 139, 140–41, 143, 145, 146–7 Bern, University of, 139, 145, 146, 147 Batumi, University of, 221–22 Bayreuth, University of, 66 benchmarking, 19 Bielfeld, University of, 66 Bildung, 57–9 biological anthropology, 10, 12, 14, 119, 120 Bologna Declaration, 33, 148 Brasov, 216 Bratislava Cabinet of Ethnology, 71 Dept of Ethnography & Folkloristics, 70–2 Dept of Ethnology, 74–5 Bucharest, 215–16 Budapest, Central University, 132 Budapest, ELTE University, 130,131,132–33

254 ◆ General Index

C Cambridge, University of, 10, 11, 12, 13 Caucasus region, 223, 231 Central Asia, 231 Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, (CNRS), 157–58, 159, 160, 161–62 Ceský lid (journal), 95 Charles University, Prague Dept of Anthropology & Demography, 96 Dept of Culturology, 99 Faculty of Humanities, 99 Inst. of Ethnology, 99 Cluj, 135, 215, 216, 217, 218, Cologne, University of, 66 Colonial Science Research Council, 11, 12 communist influences in Czech Republic, 97–98 in Hungary, 128 in Romania, 211, 212–13 in Russia, 233, 234–37 in Slovakia, 69, 70, 71, 72 compulsory courses, 240–43 Copenhagen, University of, 36, 37–40 correspondence courses, 131 Cracow University, 86, 87, 88 Craiova, 216 credits system (Neth), 24 Crete, 200 ‘Culturology’, 240, 241 curriculum in Austria, 103, 105, 106–7, 109–10 in Denmark, 42, 43 in France, 159–60, 163–65 in Georgia, 226 in Germany, 65 in Netherlands, 28, 30–32 in Norway, 42–43 in Poland, 88–90 in Portugal, 172–73, 174–75 in Slovenia, 117–18, 119 in UK, 14–15 Czech Republic, development of anthropology in, 95–98 Czech Republic Academy of Sciences, Institute of Ethnology, 99

D Danish National Museum, 37–8 Dearing Report, UK, 17, 18 Debrecen, University of, 131–32 decolonisation & anthropology, 158 Demologia, 182, 186 Denmark academic evaluation, 41–42 development of anthropology, 36–39 student/staff ratios, 41–42 diffuse ethnology, 209 diffusionist theories, 232 Diplôme d’études universaires générales (DEUG), 163, 164 disciplinary identity, UK, 19–20 Doctoraal, 24, 29, 30–32 drop-out rates, Germany, 64–65 E EASA Teaching Anthropology Network, 77, 129, 231 Ecole Pratique des Hautes Etudes (EPHTE), 157–58, 159 ECTS (European Credit Transfer System), 24, 83, 90, 119, 133, 227 employment prospects in France, 162–63, 165 in Georgia, 226 in Greece, 200 in Poland, 92 in Portugal, 176,177–78 see also vocational aspects Erasmus Programme, 83 ethnographic museums, in Switzerland, 140–1 ethnohistory, Viennese, 104–5 Ethnolog (journal), 116 ethnology/ethnography definitions 84–85,86–8 Ethnoloica Slavika, 72 ethnomedicine, 165, see also medical anthropology ethnomuscology, 76, 164, 165 ethnosociology, 237, 243 Etnograficheskoje Obozrenie/Sovetsksaia Etnografija, (journal), 232, 233 evolutionism, 232, 234–35 exchange programmes, 142–3, 147–8

General Index ◆ 255

F fieldwork in Denmark, 49 in Georgia, 222–23 in Germany, 65 in Hungary, 136 in Netherlands, 31–32 in Norway, 49 in Poland, 90–91 in Portugal, 175 in Romania, 212–13, 216 in Russia, 235–36, 242 in Slovenia, 116–17 in Switzerland, 148 in UK, 15 financial constraints in Georgia, 226, 227 in Hungary, 129, 136 in Russia, 242, 244 in UK, 16 Finno–Ugric studies, 135 Florence, origins of Italian anthropology in, 182 folklore/culture studies in Austria, 103, 105 in Czech Republic, 97 in Greece, 200 in Hungary, 127 in Italy, 183 in Poland, 84–85, 88, 89, 90 in Romania, 210, 212, 213–14 in Russia, 232 in Slovakia, 70, 71, 72, 74, 76, 78 in Slovenia, 114–15, 116, 120 in Switzerland, 140, 143–44 France development of anthropology in, 156–60 institutionalisation of anthropology in, 156–57 French Anthropology, Centre for, 159 Fribourg, University of, 139, 145, 148–49 G GAPP (Group for Anthropology in Practice), 17 gender, student in Austria, 103

in Netherlands, 24, 26–27 in Switzerland, 151n in UK, 13 Geneva, University of, 140, 141, 145 Georgia, ethnography, 222–25 Georgia, Institute/university divide, 221 Georgian people, early studeis, 223 German Research Council, 62, 65 globalisation, 139, 144, 145, 149, 189 Greece ethnography of, 193–5, 198 structure of universities, 195–6 Grillo Report, UK, 17 H habilitation, 61, 62, 103, 108, 243 Hamburg, University of, 66 historical materialism, 235 history, anthropology &, 197–98 Hungarian Ethnographic Society, 126–27, 134 I Ioannina, University of, 200 Italy development of anthropology, 182–86 ethnography, 182 immigration. 189 museums, 182–83 regionalist movements, 189 ‘Southern Question’, 189 K Kulturanthropologie, 60 L Laboratory of Social Anthropology, France, 162 language issues in Greece, 201 in Romania, 217 in Slovenia, 115, 117, 121–22 in Switzerland, 142, 149 laographia, 195 Lausanne, University of, 139, 141, 145, 148 Leiden, University of, 23, 28, 29, 30, 31, 32, 33

256 ◆ General Index

Lille, University of, 164, 165 Lisbon, ISCTE, courses, 174–75, 177 Lisbon, UNL, courses, 171–3, 177 Łódź, University of, 86, 87, 90 Ljubljana, University of, 115, 116 Lvov, University of, 83 M Magister Artium, 65 Malinowskian tradition, 85 Manchester, University of, 10, 11–12 Marxism in Russia, 232, 233, 234–35 Marxist –oriented courses, 41, 97–98, 159, see also communist influences Masaryk University, Brno Dept of Anthropology, 96 Dept of European Ethnology, 99 Masters programmes in Austria, 107,108 in Denmark, 43, 44 in France, 160, 164 in Netherlands, 24, 33–34 in Norway, 44,46 in Poland, 83, 86 in Portugal, 174 in Romania, 216 , in Slovakia, 75, 76 in Switzerland, 141–42, 148–49 in UK, 13–14 see also postgraduate programmes material culture, 84 Max Planck Institute for Social Anthropology, 59,63 medical anthropology in Austria, 109 in France, 165 in Italy, 189 in Switzerland, 145, 146–47, 150 Miercurea Cuic, University of, 217 migration, study of, 72, 144, 145–46, 149, 189 Miskolc, University of, 131, 132–33 modular system, 109–10 Moscow Lomonossov/Moscow State university, 233, 234, 236, 238 Museum of Mankind, Paris, 157, 158 Mytilene, University of the Aegean, 196, 198, 200

N Národopisný vistní (journal), 95 national ethnology/anthropology, see ‘at home’ anthropology nationalism in Czech Republic, 94–95 in Poland, 169 in Russia, 214 nation–building ethnology, 208ff native studies, see ‘at home’ anthropology Netherlands graduation project, 31 pass rates, 28–30 overview of university system, 23–25 networking, international, 108 Neuchatel, University of, 139, 140–41, 142–43, 145, 148 Nice, University of, 164, 165 Nijmegen, University of, 25, 28, 29, 30, 31, 32, 33 Nitra, Dept of Folkloristics & Regional Studies, 75–6 NNTLA (National Network for Learning & Teaching Anthropology, UK), 17–18 Norway development of anthropology, 36–7, 40–1 student/staff ratios, 45 Norwegian Ethnological Museum, 40 OM oral tradition, 127, 211, 215 Organisation de la Recherche Scientifique d’Outre-Mer (ORSTOM), 157–58,160 Oslo, University of, 36, 40–1 Oxford University of, 10–11, 12, 13 P packages, in modular system, 109–10 Paris, University, Institute of Ethnology, 156–57 Paris V-Sorbonne University, 164 Paris X-Nanterre University, 164, 165 part-time study Netherlands, 34 UK, 13

General Index ◆ 257

peasant culture, study of in Hungary, 126–7, 128, 132 in Portugal, 170, 173, 175 in Russia, 232 see also folk culture studies Pécs, University of, 131 Perestroika, 237 PhD programmes in Austria, 106–7, 108 in France, 160 in Germany, 62 in Greece, 200 in Italy, 167–88 in Romania, 216 in Russia, 243 in Slovakia, 74 in Switzerland, 141 see also postgraduate programmes Poland sociology 84,85–86 university system overview, 82–83 Portugal development of anthropology in, 169–71 ethnology, 173,175 monographic studies, 170 research projects, 172–73 Portuguese National Museum of Ethnology, 170 postgraduate programmes in Georgia, 225 in Greece, 199, 200 in Italy, 187 in Netherlands, 24, 33–34 in Russia, 243 in Slovakia, 73–74,75 in Switzerland, 147 in UK, 12–14, 15 see also masters programmes; PhD programmes postmodernism, 85 Poznan, University of, 84 Presov University, 77 professionalism, 19–20 propedeuse, 24,25,29,30,33 Provence, University of, 163–64 R race, social construction of, 46–7

Regional orientation, 144 regionalist movements 189 Robbins Report, UK, 12 Romania anthropology of everyday life 215 diffuse ethnology, 209 Hungarian communities in, 135 nation-building ethnography, 208ff oral history, 211,215 western anthropologists in, 217–18 Romanian Peasant Museum, 214, 215 Rome, origins of Italian anthropology in, 182 Russia ethnography, 231–34 higher education system, 239–43 history of anthropology , 231–38 Institute of Ethnology & Anthropology of the Russian Academy of Science/Institute of Ethnography of the Academy of Sciences of the USSR, 231, 243 S Salaries France, 161–62 Netherlands, 27–28 ‘Sciences of Society’ degree, 148–9 secondary education, anthropology in, 190 Seminarium Ethnologicum, Slovakia, 71–2 Siberia, 134–35 Silesian University, 86, 87 Slovakia Institute of Ethnography, 73 Institute of Ethnology, 73–74 Slovenia, historic background of anthropology, 114–17 Slavonic cultures, 84, 88, 89 social policy & anthropology, 199 sociography, 128 sociology in Poland, 84,85–6 Socrates Programme, 66, 83, 108, 142 South-East European anthropology, 218 Soviet legacy, 239–40 Stalinisation, 234–35 student clubs, 91

258 ◆ General Index

student numbers in Austria, 103 in Denmark, 44 in Germany, 61 in Italy, 181 in Netherlands, 26–7 in Norway, 44 in Poland, 86 in Portugal, 172, 175 in Slovenia, 119 in UK, 12–13 study tours, 108–9 substantivist philosophy, 176, 177 Swiss Ethnological Society, 144, 145 Swiss Folklore Society, 140 Switzerland, development of anthropology in, 140–41 Szeged, University of, 131–32 T Tblisi, University of, 221, 222, 225, 227, 230 teaching staff in Austria, 103 in France, 160–1 in Germany, 61–3 in Italy, 186–7 in Netherlands, 27 in Portugal, 172, 174 Thessaloniki, Aristotle University, 200 ‘third world’ anthropology, 244 Thrace, Democrites University, 196, 198 Timișoara, 217 Torún University, 86, 88, 89, 91 traditional culture, see folk culture Transylvanian Studies, 135 Trnava, Dept of Ethnology, 76–7 U UK audit culture. 18–20 disciplinary identity, 18–20

history of anthropology teaching, 9–12 University Act, 105,107,109 Utrecht, University of, 25, 28, 29, 30, 31, 32, 33 V Vienna Institute for Social & Cultural Anthropology, 103–7 Viennese Cultural Circle, 104 vocational aspects in Austria, 109, 110 in Germany, 65 in Netherlands, 31, 32 in Portugal, 176–77 in UK, 16–17 Völkerkunde In Austria, 103–4, 105 in Germany, 59–60 in Hungary, 127 in Slovenia, 115 in Switzerland, 140, 143 Volkskunde in Austria, 103, 105 in Germany, 59–60 in Hungary, 127 in Russia, 231, 232 in Slovenia, 115 in Switzerland, 143 Volos, University of Thessaly, 200 W Warsaw University, 84, 86 West Bohemia, University of, Pilsen, Dept of Social & Cultural Anthropology, 99–100 ‘writing anthropology’, 106, 107 Wrocław University, 86, 90 Z Zurich, University of, 139, 141, 142, 143, 146

Index of Names ◆◆◆◆◆

A Akeroyd, A., 16 Alber, J.-L. 152n Althusser, L., 115 Anghel, R.G., 133 Angioni, G., 186 Antonietti, Th., 152n Apolito, P., 186 Archetti, E., 41 Ardener, E., 11 B Bailey, F., 12 Bakalaki, A., 193, 201 Balandier, G., 156, 158, 162 Baldisseroni, F., 183 Balfour, H., 10–11 Bálint, S., 132 Bán, A., 133 Banfield, E., 189 Bardavelidze, V., 223–24, 228n Bariţiu, G., 209 Barth, F., 38, 40, 41,167n Bartha, E., 132 Baš, A., 115 Baumann, H., 104 Bausinger, H., 211 Bednarik, R., 70 Beneš, B., 97 Benveniste, R., 203 Bernardi, B., 185, 187

Berthoud, G., 152n Biernacka, M., 85 Birket-Smith, K., 37, 38 Biro, Z., 214 Biscione, M., 186 Bitusikova, A., 77 Bogataj, Janez, 118 Bogatyriov, P.r, 70, 72, 79n 97 Bogoraz-Tan, V.G., 232, 233, 245 Bollenbeck,, G., 58 Bollig, M., 65 Bondarenko, D., 236 Bonte, P., 231 Borhegyi, S.F., 129 Botik, J., 70 Bourdieu, P., 19,165, 166n Branco, J. F., 170 Braudel, F., 157 Brito, J. P. de, 170, 171, 174 Bromlet, Y., 128 Bromley, J., 72, 245n Bromley, Y. V., 231, 232, 234 Brumann, C., 65 Burszta, W., 85, 86 Bykovsky, S., 234 C Callier-Boisvert, C., 178n Campbell, J., 193–94

Caramelea, V., 212 Carew, D., 50 Casajus, D., 157 Centlivres, P., 140, 152n Chappaz-Wirthner, S., 152n Chitaya, G., 222, 223 Chorvatova, L., 72 Chotek, K., 70, 97 Cirese, A., 186 Clastres, P., 167 Clemente, P., 190n Clifford, J., 209 Cluckhohn, C., 120 Condominas, G., 158, 166n Cowan, J.K., 194 Creme, P.,15 Crettaz, B., 152n Croce, B., 183 Cukan, J., 76, Culic, I., 214 Cutileiro, J., 179n D Damrosz, J., 85 Danforth, L., 195 Darulova, J., 77 De Jong, W., 145 De Martino, E., 186 Dearing, Lord, 18 Densušianu, O., 209 Devereux, G., 166n

260 ◆ Index of Names

Dias, J., 169, 171, 178n Dieterlen, C., 157, 166n Dillnbergerova, S., 72 Dimen, M., 194 Dolgikh, B., 234 Dostal, W., 105 Dreyfus-Gamelon, S., 162 Dubisch, J., 202 Dubuis, C., 152n Dunn, E., 231 Dunn, S.P., 231 Dyer, W.G., 50 E Ehret, R, 152n Eriksen, T.H., 42,78 Evans-Pritchard, E., 10, 11 Feglova, V., 76 Feinrich, H., 228n Fejős, P., 128–29 Ferdinand, K., 37, 38 Fikfak, J., 115 Filippucci, P., 180, 190n Fillitz, , T., 108 Firth, R., 8,9,11 Fock, Niels, 37, 38, 41 Fortes, Meyer, 11 Foucault, M., 113, 130 Friedl, E., 194 Friedman, J., 39, 41 G Gavazzi, M., 72, 117 Geana, G., 211 Gefou-Madianou, D., 193, 195, 196, 200, 201–2, 203 Gegeshidze, M., 222–23, 224 Gellner, E., 235 Gellner, E., 94 Gfeller , N., 151n Gingrich, A., 107–8 Giordano, C., 152n Gjessing, G., 40 Gledhill, J., 18 Gluckman, M., 11

Godelier, M., 184 Gonseth, M.-O., 152n, 167n Goody, J., 156 Grafenauer, I., 116 Gramsci, A., 186 Grandchamp, C., 152n Griaule, M., 156, 157, 166n Gribaudi, G., 189 Grillo, R., 14, 15 Grønhaug, R., 41 Gross, C., 152n Grottanelli, V.L., 181, 186, 187, 190n Guerreiro, M.V., 178n Gullestad, M., 50 Gunda, B., 117 Gusti, D., 210 Gyr, U., 140

Honigsheim, P., 127 Hoppál, M., 128 Howell, S., 41 Hrdlicka, A., 96 Humboldt, W. von, 56, 57–59, 64

H Haekel, J., 104, 105 Hainard, J., 151n Halsey, A.H., 12 Harris, M., 129 Hașdeu, B., 209 Hastrup, K., 39, 47 Hauschild, T., 60,64 Heine-Geldern, R. von, 103–4, 111n Henslein, U., 59 Herder, J., 95 Héritier, F., 167n Herrenschmidt, O., 167n Herseni, T., 210 Hertz W., E., 146 Hervik, P., 47, 49, 50 Herzfeld, M., 193, 195, 202 Hirschberg, W., 104, 105 Hirschon, R., 194 Hočevar, K., 120 Hodson, A., 11 Hofer, T., 128 Hoffmann-Krayer, E., 151n Høiris, Ole, 37 Holý, L., 98

K Kalfas, V., 197 Kandert, J., 95, 97–98 Karady, V., 157 Karnoouh, C., 217 Kazankov, A., 245 Kharadze, R., 224 Klamer, A., 220 Klausen, A. M., 40, 41 Kligman, G., 217 Knecht, S., 144 Knudsen, A., 38 Komorovsky, J., 72, 74 Koppers, W., 103–4, 111n Korotayev, A.V., 244 Kosova, M., 73 Kotnik, F., 115 Kouroukli, M., 193, 194 Kovacevicova, S., 70 Kovalevskiy, M., 232 Kovani, E., 193, 194 Kremenšek, S., 115, 118, 121 Krjukov, M.V., 231, 234 Kropej, M., 115 Kunt, E., 132, 133 Kuper, A., 118, 156, 201, 202

I Itonishvili, V., 224 Izard, M., 167, 231 J Jacobson, R., 97 Jary, D, 19 Jaulin, R., 159 Javakhadze, N., 224 Jezernik, B., 115 Jochelson, V., 232 Johannessen, M.K., 40 Južnič, S., 120, 121, 122

Index of Names ◆ 261

Kürti, L., 71, 94, 126,127, 129 Kyriakidou-Nestoros, A., 200, 202 L Lamphere, L., 50 Leal, J., 169 Lebeuf, J.-P., 157 Leenhardt, M., 156, 157 Leiris, M., 157, 166n Leroi-Gourhan, A., 157 Lešcák, M., 97 Lévi-Strauss, C., 130, 156, 158, 163, 166n, 184 Lévy-Bruhl, L., 156, 166n Lichtensteiger, S., 146 Liiceanu, A., 215 Llobera, J.R., 188 Loizos, P., 202 Lombard, J., 166n Loria, L., 182–83 Lorinz, I., 214 Ložar, R., 116 Lutz, G., 60 M Maday, B., 129 Magyari-Vincze, E., 135, 218 Maher, V., 189 Malinowski, B.,10,11, 40–41, 184 Mantegazza, P., 182, 190n Marian, S., 209 Masaryk, T. G., 96 Mascarenhas-Keyes, S., 14, 15, 17, 179n, 187 Matiegka, J., 96 Mauss, M., 156, 157, 166n Mead, G. H., 113 Mehedinţi, S., 209 Meillassoux, C., 167n Meladze, N., 228n Melichercik, A., 70

Mercier, P., 166n Mesnil, M., 217 Métaix, P., 166n Métraux, A., 166n Michalek, J., 70, 72 Mihailescu, V., 134, 209 Mochi, A., 183 Mohay, C.B., 128 Morand, M.-C., 152n Motorin, N., 234 Mruskovic, S., 70 Murko, M., 115 Muršič, R., 70, 115 N Nastasă, L., 214 Netting, R., 152n Nicolaisen, J., 38, 39 Nicolau, I., 215 Niederer, A., 152n Niederle, L., 95–96 Niedermuller, P., 128 Nordborg, A., 39 Novak, V., 115, 116–18 Nowicka, E., 86 O Oberson, J., 151n Ohnuki-Tierney, E., 198 Olszewska-Dyoniziak, B., 86 Orel, B., 116 Ortiz, C., 97 Ossipow, L., 152n Otto, T., 38 Outemzabet, V., 152n P Paládi-Kovács, A., 127 Pales, L., 158 Paluch, A., 86 Papataxiarchis, E., 193, 198, 201, 202 Paradellis, Th., 203 Parikova, 70 Parish, J., 16 Pereira, R., 170 Peristiany, J., 194 Pettazzoni, R., 183, 187

Pfaff, J., 152n Piatkowska, K., 78 Pigorini, G., 182 Pina-Cabral, J., 169, 171, 188 Pinto, D., 188 Pitré, G., 183 Podolák, J., 71, 72, 76 Polányi, C., 129 Pop, M., 212 Popescu, I., 215 Power, M. 18 Pozsony, F., 133 Prazak, V., 70 Preiswerk, Y., 152n Psichopedis, K., 197 Puccini, S., 190n R Radcliffe-Browne, A. R., 10,11, 40–41, 184 Rainer, F., 210 Ramšak, M., 115 Redfield, R., 184 Remotti, F., 188, 190n Renan, E., 208 Reznik, Y.M., 238 Ribeiro, O., 171 Richards, A., 11 Riegelhaupt, J., 178n Rivet, P., 156, 158, 166n Riviere, P., 12,13 Robakidze, A., 224 Robbins, L., 12 Robotycki, C., 85 Róheim, Géza, 128 Rolshoven, J., 152n Romanska, C., 72 Rossi, I., 152n Rostas, Z., 211 Rouch, J., 157, 166n Rowland, R., 174, 175 S Salat, L., 214 Salzman, P.C., 78 Saunders, G.R., 184, 186, 189, 190n Scheffel, D., 95, 97–98

262 ◆ Index of Names

Schier, B., 70 Schmidt, Father W., 151n, 183 Schmidt, P.W., 103–4, 111n Schneider, J., 189 Schuster, M., 140 Seppilli, B., 184 Sergi, G., 182 Sharma, U., 15, 17 Shore, C., 17, 18, 19 Shternberg, L., 232 Skalnik, P., 75 Škerlj, B., 120, 121 Skovierova, Z., 71–72 Slavec Gradišnik, I., 115 Slavkovsky, P., 70 Slezkin, Y., 232 Šmitek, J., 118 Šmitek, Z., 115 Sokolewicz, Z., 84 Solovej, T. D., 234 Solymossy, S., 132 Sommer, D., 59 Soustelle, J., 166n Sozan, M., 127 Spencer, J., 9, 18 Stagl, J., 60 Stahl, H.H., 210 Stienen, A., 152n

Stirling, P., 12, 14, 15 Stocking, G., 10 Strathern, M., 18, 19 Štrekelj, K., 115 Szarvas, Z., 133 T Tarp, E., 42 Tentori, T., 184, 185 Terlecka, M., 84 Thatcher, Margaret., 12,16 Thorn, R., 17 Tishkov, V., 231, 232 Tokarev, S.A., 231, 232, 234 Trow, M., 18 Tsaoussis, D. G., 193, 196, 199 Tylor, E. B, 10, 96 V Vakarelski, C., 72 Vallois, H., 158 Verdery, K., 217 Vincze, L., 129 Vladuţiu, I., 209 W Waldis, B., 152n

Waligorski, A., 84 Watson, C.W., 15 Weber, M., 60 Weinstein, S.I., 231, 234 Weiss, R., 117 Wennerås, C., 60 Wernhart, K., 105, 107 Whyte, M., 39 Whyte, S., 39 Wicker, H.R., 145 Wiegandt, E., 152n Willemz, E., 178n Wilson, Woodrow, 96 Wimmer, A., 152n Wittgenstein, L., 113 Wocel, J. E., 95 Wold, A., 60 Wolf, E., 130 Wollman, F., 70 Wright, S., 14, 15, 17, 18, 19, 179n, 186 Z Zapisniki, 116 Zatko, R., 73 Zentai, V., 128 Zolotarjov, A., 234 Županič, N., 116