Anthropology in Motion

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Anthropology in Motion

Encounters with Current Trajectories of Scholarship from Austria

Edited by Andre Gingrich

Anthropology in Austria has come a long way, in terms of achieving diversity, growth and international visibility, since first emerging in Vienna, the capital of the former Habsburg Empire, and now of one of its main successor countries. This volume combines elements of critical self-reflection about that academic past with confidence in the intellectual currents presently in motion across the discipline.

As with the country’s contributions to world literature and music, the trrajectory of social-cultural anthropology may be seen as a good example of the global relevance of research in Austria within the humanities and social sciences. This ‘anthropology in motion’ situates itself at the intersections between contemporary and historical research, but also often between the natural and the social sciences. It shows a commitment to conceptual and theoretical pluralism, but, equally importantly, a dedication to the maintenance and improvement of standards of methodological quality. Whether empirical research is focused on studies at home or abroad, the blending of renewed forms of ethnographic fieldwork with solid comparative analyses and archival research characterizes many of these ongoing advances.

Both the liveliness and substance of contemporary anthropology in Austria emerge from a collection that also makes an unusually frank and critical appraisal of the discipline’s trajectory there.
Prof. Dame Marilyn Strathern, FBA, Girton College, University of Cambridge

It is hard to imagine a better introduction to social anthropology in Austria – both to the history of what it has been (at the heart of a multicultural and multilingual empire) and to the contemporary richness of its interests. Austria’s globally networked anthropologists of today, as this collection amply demonstrates, occupy a privileged position at the heart of Europe that enables them, with unrivalled sensitivity, to mobilize the tools of ethnography and anthropology to tackle key questions of history, culture, and radical change.
Prof. David N. Gellner,, University of Oxford

Andre Gingrich is is a Founding Member of the European Association of Social Anthropologists (EASA) and a member of the Royal Swedish and the Austrian Academies of Sciences, where (until 2019) he served as Founding Director of the Institute for Social Anthropology (ISA).
Contributors: Ayse Çaglar, Thomas Fillitz, Andre Gingrich, Chris Hann, Stephan Kloos, Eva-Maria Knoll, João de Pina-Cabral, Peter Schweitzer, Maria Six-Hohenbalken.

CONTENTS:
Chapter 1: Advances, transitions and other forms of motion: Introducing the trajectories of anthropology in Austria – Andre Gingrich; Chapter 2: Revaluation processes: Urban restructuring, war and dispossessed histories in a border city – Ayse Çaglar; Chapter 3: Remote connections: Human entanglements with built and natural environments in the Arctic and elsewhere – Peter Schweitzer; Chapter 4: In motion: Genes, identities and mediated lives in dispersed small-scale contexts – Eva-Maria Knoll; Chapter 5: Persistent universals in biennial research: A perspective from the Biennale de Dakar – Thomas Fillitz; Chapter 6: From Buddhist deities to the spirit of capitalism: Tibetan medicine and the remaking of Inner Asia – Stephan Kloos; Chapter 7: Mnemotopes and memoryscapes in a transnation: The commemorations of extreme violent experiences in Kurdish and Yezidi society – Maria Six-Hohenbalken; Chapter 8: Riddles of the past: Historical anthropology and the history of anthropology – Andre Gingrich; Chapter 9: The heirs of ethnologia: The missing homeland and three imperial suburbs; Chapter 10: Comment: An anthropology of the land – João de Pina-Cabral; Contributors; Index.

Published in association with the Royal Anthropological Institute

Hardback, ISBN 978-1-912385-32-4, £60.00 (GBP), $90.00 (USD)

 

Paperback offer for RAI Fellows £20.00 (including P&P) contact admin@therai.org.uk.