Foreword by Chris Hann Britain and the Commonwealth by Fredrik Barth 1. The Rise of Anthropology in Britain, 1830-1898 2. From the Torres Straits to the Argonauts, 1898-1922 3. Malinowski and Radcliffe-Brown, 1920-1945 4. The Golden Age, 1945-1970 5. Enduring Legacies of the British Tradition The German-Speaking Countries by Andre Gingrich 1. Prelude and Overture: From Early Travelogues to German Enlightenment 2. From the Nationalist Birth of Volkskunde to the Establishment of Academic Diffusionism: Branching Off from the International Mainstream 3.
From the Late Imperial Era to the End of the Republican Interlude: Creative Subaltern Tendencies, Larger and Smaller Schools of Anthropology 4. German Anthropology during the Nazi Period: Complex Scenarios of Collaboration, Persecution, and Competition 5. Anthropology in Four German-Speaking Countries: Key Elements of Post-World War II Developments to 1989 The French-Speaking Countries by Robert Parkin 1. Pre-Durkheimian Origins 2. Durkheim and His Era 3. Mauss, Other Durkheimians, and Interwar Developments 4. Structuralism and Marxism 5. Practice, Hierarchy, and Postmodernism The United States by Sydel Silverman 1.
The Boasians and the Invention of Cultural Anthropology 2. Postwar Expansion, Materialisms, and Mentalisms 3. Bringing Anthropology into the Modern World 4. Rebellions and Reinventions 5. American Anthropology at the End of the Century References Index.