Immagine dell'autore.

E. E. Evans-Pritchard (1902–1973)

Autore di Stregoneria, oracoli e magia tra gli azande

70+ opere 1,350 membri 13 recensioni 1 preferito

Sull'Autore

E. E. Evans-Pritchard, a British anthropologist, was the leader of the fieldwork-based social anthropology that flourished in the United Kingdom in the years following World War II. He believed that anthropological knowledge is based on detailed ethnographic and historical research. His studies of mostra altro three African societies-the Azande, the Sanusi, and the Nuer-provided the basis for much of his theoretical work. Evans-Pritchard research on the Nuer religion was the first scholarly study to present the religious beliefs of a preliterate people as having a theological significance comparable to the religious thought of more complex societies. (Bowker Author Biography) mostra meno
Fonte dell'immagine: SUNY Plattsburgh

Opere di E. E. Evans-Pritchard

Nuer Religion (1962) 88 copie
African Political Systems (1940) 61 copie
Social Anthropology (1951) 37 copie
Peoples of the Earth: 01. Australia and Melanesia (1972) — A cura di — 25 copie
The Sanusi of Cyrenaica (1985) 8 copie
Antropologia social (2011) 4 copie
Zande texts (1963) 1 copia
The Sanusi of Cyrenaica (2021) 1 copia

Opere correlate

Etichette

Informazioni generali

Nome canonico
Evans-Pritchard, E. E.
Nome legale
Evans-Pritchard, Edward Evan
Data di nascita
1902-09-21
Data di morte
1973-09-11
Sesso
male
Nazionalità
UK
Luogo di nascita
Crowborough, East Sussex, England
Istruzione
University of Oxford (Exeter College)
London School of Economics
Attività lavorative
anthropologist
Breve biografia
Professor of Social Anthropology at Oxford 1946-1970.

Utenti

Recensioni

Unfortunately this was an abridged version and I would love to know what was left out as I always find the anecdotal stories as interesting as the summary. Short version: you do not want to be a chicken in the Southern Sudan as this book details how the Azande deploy the poison oracle over ever significant event in their lives from avenging death (no one just dies, it was witchcraft) to hunting, to adultery. Witchcraft and magic are used by these people to expain patterns in life and while from Pritchard's description they are a wonderful people they still seem to find a lot of reasons for believing their neighbors are out to get them. The study was conducted just as Colonialism was destroying their culture and there is a relation between the upheaval and the destabilization of relationships. There are a few different kinds of oracles but giving chickens strychnine is the most reliable. If you can't afford that you can use the rubbing board or the termite mound. At the same time, the Azande are pretty skeptical about their witchdoctors, acknowledging many to be fake and unreliable and yet necessary. Pritchards is considered a functional anthropologist following the school of Emile Durkheim but this didnt really help me understand that framework of anthropological thinking.… (altro)
 
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Hebephrene | 3 altre recensioni | Jun 23, 2017 |
Wonderfully written and useful, classic. A reaction against the "pre-logical" theory of Levy-Bruhl. Azande beliefs fairly coherent. E-P could live within this system. Cross-cultural thinking about rationality. Somewhat outdated.
 
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clifforddham | 3 altre recensioni | Feb 3, 2014 |
Evans-Pritchard is well known in the anthropological world as one of the most coherent theoretical writers of all time. His style of fieldwork, largely influenced by Malinowski, is so detailed and precise yet also incredibly interesting to read. His descriptions of oracular addresses and witches are all described as an Azande would describe them: Evans-Pritchard not only records observations, but takes on the persona of the people he is observing. Yet, he still understands the nuances and problems with "becoming" part of the ethnographic study.

In the appendices of this book he talks solely about the art of ethnographic fieldwork. He states, "I found it useful if I wanted to understand how and why Africans are doing certain things to do them myself...But clearly one has to recognize that there is a certain pretence in such attempts at participation, and people do not always appreciate them. One enters into another culture and withdraws from it at the same time...One becomes, at least temporarily, a sort of double marginal man, alienated from both worlds.(emphasis added)"

It is this theoretical concept which makes Evans-Pritchard one of the greatest anthropologists to grace the field. For his time he was relatively objective, yet saw the problem with objectivity (something modern anthropologists are still grappling with: is attempted objectivity at all productive since bias is always manifest?). He grappled with important theoretical questions, all-the-while having a crazy experiences in the field: For example, not only did he participate as a fighter in African tribal wars, he also lost all of his ethnographic fieldwork TWICE! The first time, he actually burnt it himself during WWII, afraid that Italians would find it and use it for their own purposes. Afterwards, he rewrote all his notes from memory, and had them returned home on a ship--but the ship sank! I suggest reading more about him: he was an incredibly complex man with a razor sharp mind.
… (altro)
 
Segnalato
SweetbriarPoet | 3 altre recensioni | Jan 15, 2012 |

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Statistiche

Opere
70
Opere correlate
11
Utenti
1,350
Popolarità
#19,056
Voto
½ 3.5
Recensioni
13
ISBN
112
Lingue
11
Preferito da
1

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