The ambiguities of disciplinary professionalization: The state and cultural dynamics of Canadian inter-war anthropology.

Andrew Nurse
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

The professionalization of Canadian anthropology in the first half of the twentieth century was tied closely to the matrix of the federal state, first though the Anthropology Division of the Geological Survey of Canada and then the National Museum. State anthropologists occupied an ambiguous professional status as both civil servants and anthropologists committed to the methodological and disciplinary imperatives of modern social science but bounded and guided by the operation of the civil service. Their position within the state served to both advance disciplinary development but also compromised disciplinary autonomy. To address the boundaries the state imposed on its support for anthropology, state anthropologists cultivated cultural, intellectual, and commercially-oriented networks that served to sustain new developments in their field, particularly in folklore. This essay examines these dynamics and suggests that anthropology's disciplinary development did not create a disjuncture between professionalized scholarship and civil society.

学科专业化的模糊性:两次世界大战之间加拿大人类学的状态和文化动态。
20世纪上半叶,加拿大人类学的专业化与联邦国家的矩阵紧密相连,首先是通过加拿大地质调查局的人类学部门,然后是国家博物馆。国家人类学家占据着一种模棱两可的职业地位,既是公务员,也是致力于现代社会科学的方法论和纪律要求的人类学家,但又受到公务员制度运作的限制和指导。他们在国家中的地位既促进了学科的发展,也损害了学科的自主权。为了解决国家对其人类学支持的界限,国家人类学家培养了文化,知识和商业导向的网络,以维持他们领域的新发展,特别是在民间传说方面。本文考察了这些动态,并提出人类学的学科发展并没有在专业化学术和公民社会之间造成脱节。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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