General Note:
Originally published: The shaping of American anthropology, 1883-1911. New York : Basic Books, 1974.
Bibliography, etc. Note:
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Formatted Contents Note:
Part I. The Background of Boas' anthropology -- History of anthropology -- Rudolf Virchow's anthropological work -- The background of my early thinking -- Psychic life from a mechanistic viewpoint -- A year among the Eskimo -- Part II. Basic anthropological viewpoints -- From geographical surroundings to historical facts -- The principles of ethnological classification -- The aims of ethnology -- On alternating sounds -- Remarks on the theory of anthropometry -- Part III. The Pattern of Boas' fieldwork -- From the Eskimo to Vancouver Island -- Fieldwork for the British Association 1888-1897 -- The Jesup North Pacific Expedition -- Kathlamet texts -- The documentary function of the text -- A truthful picture for future times -- "That book conains my speech" -- Part IV. Folklore and the critique of evolutionism -- Tylor's adhesions and the distribution of myth-elements -- The mythologies of the Indians -- The mythology of the Bella Coola Indians -- Part V. The Analytical study of language -- Classification of the languages of the North Pacific Coast -- A handbook of North American languages -- Sketch of the Kwakiutl language -- A purely analytical study of language -- The relation of Tlingit and Athapascan -- The speech mannerisms of social groups -- Some philological aspects of anthropological research.
Part VI. The critique of formalism in physical anthropology -- The anthropology of the North American Indian -- Changes in immigrant body form -- Instability of human types -- Part VII. Racial capacity and cultural determinism -- Human faculty as determined by race -- Psychological problems in anthropology -- Part VIII. Anthropological overviews -- The religion of American Indians -- Anthropology -- Part IX. The Propagation of anthropology -- The Boas plan for American anthropology -- Anthropolological instruction in Columbia University -- Boas' Graduate seminar -- A plea for a great Oriental school -- The educational functions of anthropological museums -- Plans for research in Central and South America -- A residue of bitterness -- Part X. Anthropology and society -- The outlook for the American Negro -- Changing the racial attitudes of White Americans -- Race problems in America -- American nationalism and World War I -- A protest vote for the Socialist Party -- Scientists as spies -- Freedom to teach.