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Bringing Bones to Life: How Science Made Piltdown Man Human
www.informaworld.com
Paper exploring the processes through which the science of palaeoanthropology goes about fixing the humanity of "missing links" - those liminal figures residing somewhere in the space between the categories of 'human' and 'animal'. This process reveals some of the cultural tropes upon which science relies in its construction of what is human and what is not.
Posted by AHSG (who is an author) to palaeoanthropology missing link culture humanness on Wed Jan 09 2008 at 11:37 UTC | info | related
 
The Problem of Nature: Environment, Culture and European Expansion (New Perspectives on the Past)
David Arnold
This book considers how nature - in both its biological and environmental manifestations - has been invoked as a dynamic force in human history. It shows how historians, philosophers, geographers, anthropologists and scientists have used ideas of nature to explain the evolution of cultures, to understand cultural difference, and to justify or condemn colonization, slavery and racial superiority. It examines the central part that ideas of environmental and biological determinism have played in theory, and describes how these ideas have served in different ways at different times as instruments of authority, identity and defiance. The book shows how powerful and problematic the invocation of nature can be. The Problem of Nature covers a whole cycle of environmental history and its interpretation, from the Black Death in the fourteenth century, the first European voyages of discovery and the opening of the American frontier through to the imperialism of the nineteenth century and the example of India under colonial rule. David Arnold shows how both the natural environment and ideas about nature have changed radically over the last five centuries. The author describes the profound infl He shows how the outcomes of their interaction not only informed and shaped the European impact upon the world and on itself, but how crucial they are to American conceptions of the society and history of the United States. He provides provocative answers to the questions of what role the environment should have in the conceptualization of time and place; and of how far societies and their histories can be understood from the perspectives of natural and biological sciences.
Posted by AHSG to culture nature on Tue Jul 24 2007 at 09:03 UTC | info | related

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