About this item
Highlights
- Time and the Other is a classic work that critically reexamined the relationship between anthropologists and their subjects and reoriented the approach literary critics, philosophers, and historians took to the study of humankind.
- About the Author: Johannes Fabian is professor emeritus of cultural anthropology at the University of Amsterdam.
- 272 Pages
- Social Science, Anthropology
Description
About the Book
Time and the Other is a classic work that critically reexamined the relationship between anthropologists and their subjects and reoriented the approach literary critics, philosophers, and historians took to the study of humankind.Book Synopsis
Time and the Other is a classic work that critically reexamined the relationship between anthropologists and their subjects and reoriented the approach literary critics, philosophers, and historians took to the study of humankind. Johannes Fabian challenges the assumption that anthropologists live in the "here and now," that their subjects live in the "there and then," and that the "other" exists in a time not contemporary with our own. He also pinpoints the emergence, transformation, and differentiation of a variety of uses of time in the history of anthropology that set specific parameters between power and inequality. In this edition, a new postscript by the author revisits popular conceptions of the "other" and the attempt to produce and represent knowledge of other(s).Review Quotes
The confidence and optimism that Fabian expresses contributes in no small way to the exhilarating intellectual experience this book offers.
--Gauri Viswanathan "Columbia University "Praise for the first edition:
"A radical epistemological critique of anthropological writing."--George Marcus, University of California, Irvine
"The confidence and optimism that Fabian expresses contributes in no small way to the exhilarating intellectual experience this book offers."--Gauri Viswanathan, Columbia University
Praise for the first edition:
"A radical epistemological critique of anthropological writing."--George Marcus, University of California, Irvine
"The confidence and optimism that Fabian expresses contributes in no small way to the exhilarating intellectual experience this book offers."--Gauri Viswanathan, Columbia University
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The confidence and optimism that Fabian expresses contributes in no small way to the exhilarating intellectual experience that this book offers.--Gauri Viswanathan, Columbia University
A radical epistemological critique of anthropological writing.--George Marcus, University of California, Irvine
About the Author
Johannes Fabian is professor emeritus of cultural anthropology at the University of Amsterdam. His books include Out of Our Minds: Reason and Madness in the Exploration of Central Africa; Memory Against Culture: Arguments and Reminders; Anthropology with an Attitude: Critical Essays; and Ethnography as Commentary: Writing from the Virtual Archive.
Matti Bunzl is professor of anthropology and history at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and the author of Anti-Semitism and Islamophobia: Hatreds Old and New in Europe.