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Department of Social Anthropology

 

Freddy Foks (University of Cambridge)

Constructing the field in colonial Africa: power, persona and paper tools

 

How did inter-war social anthropologists go about trying to understand a ‘whole society’? This paper draws on archival sources to reveal the research methods, political contexts and inter-personal relations that contributed to the construction of ‘the field’ in East and Central Africa during the 1930s. By doing so, the paper contributes to a long-running discussion carried on by historians, philosophers and anthropologists about the nature of observation and understanding in the modern social sciences. The paper argues that knowledge produced ‘in the field’ led to the formation of a distinctive and authoritative scholarly persona in Britain by the Second World War (the figure of the ‘social anthropologist’). This persona was constituted by extending the lessons learnt at Bronislaw Malinowski’s seminar at the LSE into the politically and socially uneven terrain of Britain’s African colonies.

Image: Interior of Monica and Godfrey Wilson's fieldwork base at Isumba

Source:http://www.digitalcollections.lib.uct.ac.za/collection/islandora-5693

Date: 
Friday, 25 January, 2019 - 16:15 to 18:00
Subject: 
Event location: 
Edmund Leach Room, Department of Social Anthropology Free School Lane, Cambridge