Description

Book Synopsis

“Peasants tell tales,” one prominent cultural historian tells us (Robert Darnton). Scholars must then determine and analyze what it is they are saying and whether or not to incorporate such tellings into their histories and ethnographies. Challenging the dominant culturalist approach associated with Clifford Geertz and Marshall Sahlins among others, this book presents a critical rethinking of the philosophical anthropologies found in specific histories and ethnographies and thereby bridges the current gap between approaches to studies of peasant society and popular culture. In challenging the methodology and theoretical frameworks currently used by social scientists interested in aspects of popular culture, the author suggests a common discursive ground can be found in an historical anthropology that recognizes how myths, fairytales and histories speak to a universal need for imagining oneself in different timescapes and for linking one’s local world with a “known” larger world.



Trade Review

This is a provocative, demanding, and sometimes annoying book that is nevertheless very much worth the effort it takes to read it…Hermann Rebel puts his finger on difficult and unresolved issues in this challenging book. · JRAI



Table of Contents

List of Tables
Preface
Acknowledgements

Chapter 1. What People without History? A Case for Historical Anthropology as a Narrative-Critical Science

PART I: MYTHS

Chapter 2. Figurations in Historical Anthropology: Two Kinds of Narrative about the Long Duration Provenances of the Holocaust
Chapter 3. Culture and Power in Eric Wolf’s Project

PART II: FAIRY TALES

Chapter 4. Why Not “Old Marie” . . . or Someone Very Much Like Her? A Reassessment of the Question about the Grimms’ Contributors
Chapter 5. When Women Held the Dragon’s Tongue

PART III: HISTORIES

Chapter 6. Peasants Against the State in the Body of Anna Maria Wagner: An Austrian Infanticide in 1832
Chapter 7. What do the Peasants Want Now? Realists and Fundamentalists in Swiss and South German Rural Politics, 1650-1750

PART IV: ANTHROPOLOGIES

Chapter 8. Reactionary Modernism and the Postmodern Challenge to Narrative Ethics

Bibliography
Index

When Women Held the Dragon's Tongue: and Other

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    A Hardback by Hermann Rebel

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      View other formats and editions of When Women Held the Dragon's Tongue: and Other by Hermann Rebel

      Publisher: Berghahn Books
      Publication Date: 01/02/2010
      ISBN13: 9781845456207, 978-1845456207
      ISBN10: 1845456203

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      “Peasants tell tales,” one prominent cultural historian tells us (Robert Darnton). Scholars must then determine and analyze what it is they are saying and whether or not to incorporate such tellings into their histories and ethnographies. Challenging the dominant culturalist approach associated with Clifford Geertz and Marshall Sahlins among others, this book presents a critical rethinking of the philosophical anthropologies found in specific histories and ethnographies and thereby bridges the current gap between approaches to studies of peasant society and popular culture. In challenging the methodology and theoretical frameworks currently used by social scientists interested in aspects of popular culture, the author suggests a common discursive ground can be found in an historical anthropology that recognizes how myths, fairytales and histories speak to a universal need for imagining oneself in different timescapes and for linking one’s local world with a “known” larger world.



      Trade Review

      This is a provocative, demanding, and sometimes annoying book that is nevertheless very much worth the effort it takes to read it…Hermann Rebel puts his finger on difficult and unresolved issues in this challenging book. · JRAI



      Table of Contents

      List of Tables
      Preface
      Acknowledgements

      Chapter 1. What People without History? A Case for Historical Anthropology as a Narrative-Critical Science

      PART I: MYTHS

      Chapter 2. Figurations in Historical Anthropology: Two Kinds of Narrative about the Long Duration Provenances of the Holocaust
      Chapter 3. Culture and Power in Eric Wolf’s Project

      PART II: FAIRY TALES

      Chapter 4. Why Not “Old Marie” . . . or Someone Very Much Like Her? A Reassessment of the Question about the Grimms’ Contributors
      Chapter 5. When Women Held the Dragon’s Tongue

      PART III: HISTORIES

      Chapter 6. Peasants Against the State in the Body of Anna Maria Wagner: An Austrian Infanticide in 1832
      Chapter 7. What do the Peasants Want Now? Realists and Fundamentalists in Swiss and South German Rural Politics, 1650-1750

      PART IV: ANTHROPOLOGIES

      Chapter 8. Reactionary Modernism and the Postmodern Challenge to Narrative Ethics

      Bibliography
      Index

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