Description
Book SynopsisBones and Bodies is a highly accessible account of the establishment of the scientific discipline of biological anthropology. Alan G Morris takes us back over the past century of anthropological discovery in South Africa and uncovers the stories of individual scientists and researchers who played a significant role in shaping perceptions of how peoples of southern Africa, both ancient and modern, came to be viewed and categorised both in the public imagination and the scientific literature.
Morris reveals how much of the earlier anthropological studies were tainted with the tarred brush of race science, evaluating the works of famous anthropologists and archaeologists such as Raymond Dart, Thomas Dreyer, Matthew Drennan and Robert Broom.
Morris also considers how modern anthropology tried to rid itself of the stigma of these early racist accounts. In the 1960s and 1970s, Ronald Singer and Phillip Tobias introduced modern methods into the discipline that disputed much of what the public wished to believe about race and human evolution.
Bones and Bodies shows the battle facing modern anthropology to acknowledge its racial past but also how its study of human variation remains an important field of enquiry at institutions of higher learning.
Table of Contents
- List of Illustrations
- A Note on the Use of Historical Terminology
- Acknowledgements
- List of Characters with Dates of Birth, Death and Affiliation
- Schema of Types
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 Dr Louis Péringuey’s Well-Travelled Skeletons
- Chapter 2 Boskop: The First South African Fossil Human Celebrity
- Chapter 3 Matthew Drennan and the Scottish Influence in Cape Town
- Chapter 4 The Age of Racial Typology in South Africa
- Chapter 5 Raymond Dart’s Complicated Legacy
- Chapter 6 Ronald Singer, Phillip Tobias and the ‘New Physical Anthropology’
- Chapter 7 Physical Anthropology and the Administration of Apartheid
- Chapter 8 The Politics of Racial Classification in Modern South Africa
- Select Bibliography
- Index