"The book offers a critical overview of Croatian ethnology written by the most prominent Croatian ethnologist/ anthropologist in the second half of the 20th century - Dunja Rihtman-Augustin (recently deceased). She was the first Croatian ethnologist to break with the long established tradition of diffusionist (culture area) studies of her contemporaries and start to anthropologize Croatian ethnology. This book, compiled and completed by Jasna Capo Zmegac, highlights some crucial remarks with regard to the relationship between ethnology and politics. They are formulated as a series of research questions and problems, including: the role of folk culture as mythomoteur, cannonization of the folk culture, nationalization of the peasants in the 19th century and the role of ethnology. This vividly written text offers an exceptional insight into Croatian ethnological developments in the past century, as well as into crucial ruptures in Croatian society which have had important repercussions on ethnological discipline."--Provided by publisher
The publication of An Introduction to Scottish Ethnology sees the completion of the fourteen-volume Scottish Life and Society series, originally conceived by the eminent ethnologist Professor Alexander Fenton. The series explores the many elements in Scottish history, language and culture which have shaped the identity of Scotland and Scots at local, regional and national level, placing these in an international context. Each of the thirteen volumes already published focuses on a particular theme or institution within Scottish society. This introduction provides an overview of the discipl
A discussion of recent work in the field of ethnology re 3 major realms of inquiry, soc org, econ anthrop, & the ethnology of religion. Re soc org, the scope of study, which still includes band & village communities, has broadened to include complex, l Ur-industr societies. There has been a renewed exploration of the systemic characteristics of kinship phenomena which has been associated with an interest in methodology as such. Mathematical models, the linguistic technique of componential analysis & computer simulation of the functioning of marriage systems are some of the more striking lines of methodological exp'tion. Ru econ's, recent yrs have witnessed the rise of econ anthrop as a major field of specialization with an increasingly sophisticated theoretical orientation & a marked improvement in the techniques & scope of field investigation. The literature on econ development has proliferated in recent yrs. In it there seems to be a widespread search for elucidation of the major variables that affect change, a search that is characterized by a seeking out of ties between econ behavior & the whole range of cultural activity, familial, religious, pol'al & communal, as well as national & internat'l. The focus in the studies of religion has shifted from religion defined as supernaturalism to religion as 'ideals or values, often ethical in nature, that are highly cherished & surrounded by intense emotional feelings.' Another focus of interest has been upon syncretism of folk beliefs & practices with one or another of the major religions. However diverse the field of ethnology, it continues to be character~zed by the sharing of comprehensiveness or holism, that ethnological penchant for studying any kind of behavior by placing in, it in its total context. Field observation & interrogation are still the ethnologist's most productive tools, though appropriate, techniques of quantification have been added in response to the l, demand for harder data. Cultures are no longer studied as though they were immutable entities. The backdrop of all work (s an emphasis upon process & change, particularly upon the acculturation of diverse traditions. Cultural change, in this sense, is no longer a specialization within the field. It has become the field. S. Schwartz.