Article(electronic)December 1, 2020

'Rates of Exchange' Rather than Intellectual Exchanges

In: Durkheimian studies: Études durkheimiennes, Volume 24, Issue 1, p. 86-96

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Abstract

The newly found exchange of letters between Marcel Mauss and Victor Branford dated 1926 testifies to the active exchanges between both their traditions. Durkheimian sociology owed a great deal to the Branford-Geddes network of colleagues across the Channel, not less than a funding of the republication of their iconic journal, the Année sociologique. On the other hand, Branford was far from apologetic about his own tradition of thought and even went as far as to criticize the Institut Français de Sociologie in the 1920s. All this shows the enduring links between both countries in the field of sociology, contrary to what has often been held.

Publisher

Berghahn Books

ISSN: 1752-2307

DOI

10.3167/ds.2020.240107

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